Posts Tagged ‘percent increase’

Itunes Takes Over A Quarter Of 2009 Music Gross Sales

The iTunes Store was the source of more than a quarter of US music sales during 2009, even when squared off against combined digital and retail competition, figures from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry show. Apple contributed to a modest 1.1 percent growth in domestic digital sales, and a 9.2 percent increase for digital internationally, pushing the sector to $4.3 billion. The music industry as whole has continued to decline however, falling 7.2 percent to be worth $17 billion.

Sales have been slipping every year since 1999. The IFPI cites piracy as one of music’s “biggest obstacles,” and suggests that local government clampdowns could help restore the industry to profit. 2009 sales dropped the most, proportionately, in the United States and Japan, which together accounted for 80 percent of the $1.3 billion in global losses.

Apple has few challengers in the digital arena; even Amazon and Microsoft are believed to have just fractions of Apple’s share. Microsoft has not published much data from the Zune Marketplace, making it difficult to do an accurate comparison. At the same time though, iTunes is estimated to account for 69 percent of online music sales.

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Consumers Found Vulnerable To E-Mail Threats

The survey, conducted by market research firm Ipsos for the group, interviewed almost 4,000 adult online users in the United States, Canada, France, Germany, United Kingdom and Spain.

Almost half of respondents said they have opened spam, and about 1 in 10 have either clicked on links or downloaded attachments from spam messages. Four percent replied to the messages and another 4 percent even forwarded them to other people.

“That’s a very, very large number of people who are at risk,” Ipsos spokesman Nicolas Boyon said.

Most of those who have opened spam said they weren’t sure what the message was, clicked it by mistake or were trying to unsubscribe. Interestingly, almost 1 in 5 said they did so because they wanted to see what would happen.

While less than half of users have ever heard the term “botnet,” 82 percent said they understood the concept – a network of infected computers used by criminals for malicious purposes. That’s a 5 percent increase from last year. Sixty-three percent of respondents in the United States, however, said they have contracted computer viruses in the past.

Misjudging problem

The results of the survey echoed some of the recurring points raised at the 18th gathering of anti-messaging experts: threats continue to become more abundant and diverse while users still underestimate the problem and consumer education is lacking.

Internet providers, security vendors, consumer advocates and government representatives also voiced growing concerns over spam distributed through social networks, the growing number of hijacked computers in countries such as Brazil and Vietnam where broadband use is rising, and targeted attacks preying on people from all kinds of socioeconomic backgrounds and flying under the radar.

Source: articles.sfgate.com

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Consumers Found Vulnerable To E-Mail Threats

The survey, conducted by market research firm Ipsos for the group, interviewed almost 4,000 adult online users in the United States, Canada, France, Germany, United Kingdom and Spain.

Almost half of respondents said they have opened spam, and about 1 in 10 have either clicked on links or downloaded attachments from spam messages. Four percent replied to the messages and another 4 percent even forwarded them to other people.

“That’s a very, very large number of people who are at risk,” Ipsos spokesman Nicolas Boyon said.

Most of those who have opened spam said they weren’t sure what the message was, clicked it by mistake or were trying to unsubscribe. Interestingly, almost 1 in 5 said they did so because they wanted to see what would happen.

While less than half of users have ever heard the term “botnet,” 82 percent said they understood the concept – a network of infected computers used by criminals for malicious purposes. That’s a 5 percent increase from last year. Sixty-three percent of respondents in the United States, however, said they have contracted computer viruses in the past.

Misjudging problem

The results of the survey echoed some of the recurring points raised at the 18th gathering of anti-messaging experts: threats continue to become more abundant and diverse while users still underestimate the problem and consumer education is lacking.

Internet providers, security vendors, consumer advocates and government representatives also voiced growing concerns over spam distributed through social networks, the growing number of hijacked computers in countries such as Brazil and Vietnam where broadband use is rising, and targeted attacks preying on people from all kinds of socioeconomic backgrounds and flying under the radar.

Source: articles.sfgate.com

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