Carrefour to offer movie downloads

movie

DENVER — New figures from NPD Group suggest that the Amazon DRM-free digital music service is doing more to grow the overall digital music market as opposed to simply stealing customers from iTunes.
The research group says only 10% of Amazon customers had previously bought music from Apple’s iTunes service. While many tagged the Amazon service as an “iTunes killer” when it first launched, the music industry’s hope all along was never to cannibalize iTunes sales but rather encourage new digital buyers. NPD’s data suggest exactly that is happening.
“The fact that Amazon’s early growth does not appear to be at the expense of Apple iTunes is a healthy indication that the digital music customer pool can expand into new consumer groups who have not yet joined the iTunes community,” said NPD analyst Russ Crupnick in a statement.
NPD says Amazon is now second only to iTunes in the a la carte digital download category (for those keeping score). The company did not disclose how many users Amazon has attracted in total, however it did say iTunes volume is 10 times that of Amazon.
Some interesting demographic breakdown has emerged between the two services as well. NPD says 84% of Amazon customers are male, compared to 44% of iTunes, but only 3% of Amazon customers were teens, compared to iTunes’ 18% (the latter attributed primarily to the popularity of iTunes gift cards.)
NPD says Amazon’s growth is likely more due to existing Amazon customers adopting the new service rather than due its lower pricing or DRM-free policies.
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This entry was posted on Friday, April 18th, 2008 at 8:29 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

10 Responses to “Carrefour to offer movie downloads”

  1. Maud Says:

    thepiratebay.orgmininova.org

  2. Sybilla Says:

    At least the cap is not secret…

  3. Malina Says:

    Wake up, Apple, Amazon is going to do everything in its power to outdo you in this area. And so far, Amazon is doing everything right - this is a good example - and you are not.Kudos to Amazon.

  4. Sue Says:

    Hey, whatever! It’s not like the american public paid for new tubes back in the mid-90’s … someone’s gotta pay (twice) for all that traffic!

  5. Kristie Says:

    To bad comcast just issued a new regulation they don’t tell you about, blocking you from downloading HD content.

  6. Chris Says:

    I pity the fool that falls for this waste of money.

  7. Prudence Says:

    The only way this could possibly work out in the consumer’s favor is if the lower tiers of access are cheaper than the current price of internet access, with the current price (or close to it) being the price for the “unlimited tier.”Anything different, and Time Warner is simply looking to increase their profits.Looks to me like the consumers will be the big losers here.

  8. Wilton Says:

    I prefer http://filespump.com for searching mp3. There are result form 4shared, Badongo, Depositfiles, Filefactory, Filefront bases and I have to say that it works good for me!!

  9. Katherina Says:

    Linux users could always buy individual MP3s from Amazon, but now they can download entire albums as a package, saving a bit of money. It’s about time! Not sure what took them so long if there’s no DRM to worry about.