- The blocks reduced visits to the infringing sites by 90% over a 14 month period
- There was no corresponding increase in visits to unblocked pirate sites
- There was a corresponding decrease in piracy of 22%
- There was a corresponding 6% increase of visits to legal pay streaming sites such as Netflix
- There was a corresponding 10% increase in visits to legal free (ad supported) streaming sites
A Year after Blocking 53 Websites, UK Piracy Drops And the Internet Still Functions
09/02/2016
Stephen Carlisle
No Subjects
A lot of very silly arguments get passed around the Internet by those who desperately want to believe them. Remember the argument that piracy of copyrighted material really didn't hurt artists financially, and in fact helped them? It took three researchers from Carnegie Mellon University to bury that ridiculous notion once and for all.[ref]Copyright Piracy and the Entertainment Industries: Is the Effect Massive or Negligible[/ref]
Well, our intrepid trio is at it again, this time taking on the contentious issue of website blocking, which if you only listen to extremists like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, you would think that this will lead to the destruction of the internet as we know it.[ref]EFF, CloudFlare Ask Federal Court Not To Force Internet Companies To Enforce Music Labels' Trademarks[/ref] A year ago, I wrote how courts in three different countries had ordered website blocking, and yet the internet failed to spontaneously self-destruct.[ref]Courts in Canada, Germany and U.S. Order Website Blocking, Internet Fails to Spontaneously Self-Destruct[/ref] In the ensuing year, I haven't noticed that my internet behaves any differently than it did before. This is because the EFF doesn't understand the difference between criminal copyright infringement and legitimate free speech.
So now we have this study that shows that not only does site blocking work, but the internet remains unscathed.
Titled "Website Blocking Revisited: The Effect of the UK November 2014 Blocks on Consumer Behavior,"[ref]Website Blocking Revisited: The Effect of the UK November 2014 Blocks on Consumer Behavior[/ref] Brett Danaher, Michael D. Smith, and Rahul Telang make an in depth analysis of consumer behavior in the United Kingdom following the court ordered site blocking of 53 websites. I will note, as I do when Google funds a study,[ref]Google Funded Study Concludes Google Needs More Legal Protection From Small Copyright Owners![/ref] that this research is a part of Carnegie Mellons "Initiative for Digital Entertainment Analytics," which is partially funded by an unrestricted grant from the MPAA.
Their findings conclude:[ref]Abstract to "Website Blocking Revisited"[/ref]
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