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FRANKFURT/MAIN, Germany:  Napster President Bradford Duea stands beside his company's logo 08 December 2005 before giving a press conference in Frankfurt/M. The online music swap company started its online services in Germany.    AFP PHOTO    DDP/THOMAS LOHNES GERMANY OUT  (Photo credit should read THOMAS LOHNES/DDP/AFP via Getty Images)
FRANKFURT/MAIN, Germany: Napster President Bradford Duea stands beside his company's logo 08 December 2005 before giving a press conference in Frankfurt/M. The online music swap company started its online services in Germany. AFP PHOTO DDP/THOMAS LOHNES GERMANY OUT (Photo credit should read THOMAS LOHNES/DDP/AFP via Getty Images)Photo credit should read THOMAS LOHNES/DDP/AFP via Getty Images

LeBron James, Eminem's 'How Music Got Free' Docuseries Drops Trailer and Release Date

Tyler ConwayMay 22, 2024

How Music Got Free, the Paramount+ docuseries produced by LeBron James and Eminem highlighting the rise of Napster and Internet piracy in music, will debut June 11.

Founded in 1999, Napster was a peer-to-peer file sharing service that created arguably the biggest change in music industry history. Decades of a structured progression, starting with records, moving to cassettes and finally CDs, went poof overnight as anyone with an internet connection and computer could download files and then burn them onto CDs.

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Soon after, music began leaking onto Napster before its planned release, causing album sales to plummet. The music industry swiftly took action, and Napster folded in 2002—just three years after it was founded.

However, the proverbial toothpaste was out of the tube and sales for physical copies of music never recovered. Copycat peer-to-peer sites popped up all over the internet, and eventually people were able to download full albums via torrents.

The introduction of music streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music has largely crippled piracy, but the finances of the music industry never recovered. Fans once paid $10-15 to buy one album; they now have the entire music catalog of every artist on the planet for the same price.

Streaming revenue for artists also pales in comparison to album sales; most musicians now make their money off of touring and merchandise, rather than by releasing albums.

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