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Time Warner Cable: Heavy Downloaders Should Pay Us More Money
(via - Mashable! )
I read it on 01/17/08 at 11:58 AM
Posted on 01/17/08 at 08:12 AM

time warner cable

Bad news for big downloaders who use Time Warner Cable as their ISP: you may soon face a higher bill. The nation's #2 cable ISP is set to begin charging customers more based on the amount they download.

A spokesman for the company says that the top 5 percent of downloaders can account for up to 50 percent of network capacity, which is why they are considering the new pricing structure. According to a report from the Associated Press, Time Warner Cable would offer various tiers of pricing, versus what could become painfully expensive pay-as-you-go charges for bandwidth. However, there is no need to freak out yet if you're currently a TWC customer for now, the new pricing structure is only being offered as a trial in Beaumont, Texas, and will only impact new customers.

While I imagine the immediate reaction to TWC's plan will be decidedly negative, it at least seems more reasonable than AT&T and Comcast's filtering of traffic for users that frequent p2p download services like BitTorrent.

On the other hand, if TWC's interest is truly to be fair, prices won't only go up for big downloaders, but they'll go down for those that consume little bandwidth (yea, right).

    Is it fair for ISPs to charge heavy downloaders higher fees?
    • Yes
    • No
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Tags: downloaders  cable  twc  pricing  warner  
 
 

Getting Millions Of People Listening To Your Music, With Many Giving You Money Voluntarily, Is Dumb?
(via - Techdirt )
I read it on 12/18/07 at 08:22 AM
Posted on 12/18/07 at 01:21 PM

Karl writes in to point out that on Fortune/CNN's somewhat bizarre list of 101 Dumbest Moments in Business, number 59 is about Radiohead's decision to offer a name-your-own-price offering for its downloaded music. As CNN notes, "Can't wait for the follow-up album, 'In Debt." Ha ha. It then quotes the disputed Comscore numbers, suggesting that since only 38% of downloaders agreed to pay anything for the album, this is somehow a dumb move. I would argue that the only thing "dumb" here is the inclusion of this move on the list. CNN seems to think that Radiohead expected everyone to pay for the album, when even the band has clearly stated that this was a promotional move. Is CNN "dumb" for putting this article online for free? Of course not -- because they make money through other means, such as advertising. In the same way, Radiohead did quite well even if people downloaded the album for free. After all, even if the Comscore numbers are accurate, Radiohead still pulled in millions, distributed millions of tracks to fans all over the world with no promotional budget, got its name and its music talked about around the globe and found at the top of popular playlists everywhere, and got a tremendous amount of free advertising for its upcoming tour and CD box sets. Can you name a single band in the world that would turn that down? Hell, can you name a single Fortune/CNN editor who would turn that down if he were in Radiohead's shoes? Not unless he was pretty dumb. In fact, if Radiohead did anything dumb it was shutting off the download site.

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Tags: radiohead  dumb  cnn  album  name  


 
 

A Different (Unpopular) Take On The Radiohead Experiment
(via - Paul Colligan's Profitable Podcasting )
I read it on 11/06/07 at 08:44 AM
Posted on 11/06/07 at 02:24 PM

Why won't anybody run the REAL numbers on the Radiohead experiment? How the #*(&$#(* can this be regarded as anything other than a success? From Comscore we've found that 2 out of 5 Downloaders Willing to Pay an Average of $6 for In Rainbows Album. Do the math on that one. Radiohead collected [...]


Tags: radiohead  experiment  pay  willing  downloaders  
 
 

Gov't Commissioned Study Finds P2P Downloaders Buy More Music (Michael Geist Blog)
(via - Techmeme )
I read it on 11/03/07 at 11:38 AM
Posted on 11/03/07 at 04:25 PM

Gov't Commissioned Study Finds P2P Downloaders Buy More Music A newly study commissioned by Industry Canada, which includes some of the most extensive surveying to date of the Canadian population on music purchasing habits, finds what many have long suspected (though CRIA has denied)

Source: Michael Geist Blog
Author: Michael Geist
Link: http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/2347/125/

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Tags: p  geist  music  finds  study  
 
 
 



 
 
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