This link has been bookmarked by 3 people . It was first bookmarked on 11 Jun 2009, by Jonathan Bailey.
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Alexandre MateusThe survey was commissioned by media law firm Wiggin. Simon Baggs, a partner at the firm, said that "the findings of this report show that letter sending alone will not be enough, and that much more needs to be done if there is to be a real reduction in unlawful filesharing. That reduction is crucial if the business models identified in this report are to be allowed to develop."
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Last year, the UK-focused Digital Entertainment Survey came to a shocking conclusion: 70 percent of people sharing copyrighted files on the Internet would change their piratical ways if they received a warning notice from their ISPs. This was music to the ears of the record business, but it couldn't last; this year, the 70 percent figure has plummeted to 33 percent.
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The 2009 survey finds that UK file-swappers just aren't worried about warning letters alone anymore. The change may be due to the UK government's quite public pronouncements that "disconnection" of repeat offenders isn't going to happen, removing the implicit threat behind the warning letters.
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