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Global Napster Usage Plummets While New File-Sharing Alternatives Gain Ground
While time spent using Napster in the U.S. drops 70 percent, Bodetella, Audiogalaxy and Imesh become the latest adopted alternatives
Vivendi Universal's Edgar Bronfman, Jr., RealNetworks' Rob Glaser, AOL Music's
Kevin Conroy, Bertelsmann e-Commerce Group's Andreas Schmidt and Napster's
Hank Barry to address the technological and legal forces reshaping the music
industry, July 23-24 at Plug.In in New York City
July 20, 2001 Jupiter Media Metrix today reports that total time spent using the Napster file-sharing application plummeted 65 percent among home users in 14 leading wired countries, from
6.3 billion minutes in February 2001, Napster's peak month in terms of both time and unique users, to 2.2 billion minutes in June 2001. According to Media Metrix ratings data, unique users of the application dropped 31 percent, from 26.4 million to 18.3 million over the same period. These figures represent more than 85 percent of the worldwide online population and include usage in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Spain, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.
But while Napster usage has plunged globally, recent U.S. data reveal the early adoption of several new file-sharing alternatives. In May 2001, six file-sharing applications other than Napster appeared in the Media Metrix U.S. reports, up from five in March 2001 and up from one in January 2001. Bodetella, a client designed for the Gnutella network, held steady at around 1.0 million unique users between January 2001 and May. Audiogalaxy, the second most popular file-sharing application, had 978,000 unique visitors in
May 2001, up 78 percent from March 2001, the first month it was reportable.
Next was Imesh with 474, 000 unique visitors, up 11 percent from April 2001,
its first reportable month.
"Last year Napster became one of the fastest growing software applications
Media Metrix ever reported, with its U.S. user base nearly quadrupling within
six months of the application's debut into the ratings reports," said Doug
McFarland, president, Media Metrix, the online ratings unit of Jupiter Media
Metrix. "Today, the Media Metrix ratings show a wide scattering of the former
Napster audience to various other music file-sharing resources."
Napster's Rise and Fall The Impact on the Music Industry:
"The time the Napster litigation bought the labels has run out and the
grim reality is that Napster's audience is beginning to be fragmented across
many services, which will be very difficult, if not impossible, to litigate
against in the same way," said Mark Mooradian, vice president and senior
analyst, Jupiter Media Metrix. "The next generation of underground file
sharing services underscores the need for legitimate music providers, and not
just the major labels, to act promptly, putting battles over platforms and
copyrights behind them as soon as possible."
Plug.In:
July 23 - 24, in New York City, a prestigious group of keynote speakers will assemble to address the future of digital music at Jupiter Media Metrix and Billboard's sixth annual Plug.In Forum. More than 40 senior executives and hundreds of delegates from all sides of the music industry will convene with Jupiter analysts to examine the critical issues involved in music distribution and retailing, from the battle for market share to the latest file-sharing technology. There will be a special appearance by recording artist Alanis Morissette.
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