"Beautiful! I'm going to definitely see in the cinema!" so says one of the many users who have illegally downloaded Wolverine before its release to the movies took place this weekend, and should not be the only one to have thought so. The film has now grossed well indeed: about $ 87 million in its opening weekend, a little less of those 98 million a year ago went to register Iron Man, and in Italy reached the 2 million euro in 2003 as did the homologous X-Men 2. Yet
Wolverine had to be a case in point was available online in defiance of the copyright a month ago, but never a Hollywood movie was so important to put in so much time before the network! 30 days where the downloads were so many, well one million in its first week. Yet the film collects well. He does this despite the fact that it is not much of a girlfriend, and despite the fear of swine fever for which advise against all congregate indoors.
All this confirms that, despite everything that is said, piracy does not actually damage the salt. Who chooses the room chooses to leave home, go to around and do something in social places in the city, while a pirated movie, if anything, is in competition with other types of home entertainment such as home video.
The question then arises as to the damage of piracy and how it is attributable to the fact that there is an identical offer legal but at a reasonable cost. If those millions of illegal downloads were legal and paid instead (to be added to the millions of tickets sold) could still speak of losses for the industry?
by La Gazzetta dello Sport of 06/05/2009
Wolverine had to be a case in point was available online in defiance of the copyright a month ago, but never a Hollywood movie was so important to put in so much time before the network! 30 days where the downloads were so many, well one million in its first week. Yet the film collects well. He does this despite the fact that it is not much of a girlfriend, and despite the fear of swine fever for which advise against all congregate indoors.
All this confirms that, despite everything that is said, piracy does not actually damage the salt. Who chooses the room chooses to leave home, go to around and do something in social places in the city, while a pirated movie, if anything, is in competition with other types of home entertainment such as home video.
The question then arises as to the damage of piracy and how it is attributable to the fact that there is an identical offer legal but at a reasonable cost. If those millions of illegal downloads were legal and paid instead (to be added to the millions of tickets sold) could still speak of losses for the industry?
by La Gazzetta dello Sport of 06/05/2009
0 comments:
Post a Comment