![]() Clearly, most people gave more than one reason. Of those people who have seen the error of their ways, 67 per cent said they had changed their behaviour because they were worried about getting viruses on their computer, 65 per cent cited that there were more legal options for obtaining content, 61 per cent said they had decided it was the wrong thing to do and 56 per cent said the content was poor quality. Of these people, 10 per cent are classified as persistent offenders, that is, those that act illegally at least once a week and a further 17 per cent offend between once a week and once a fortnight.Īccording to the research there are also 10 per cent who are lapsed illegal downloaders, in other words, they once offended but don’t any longer, and the rest of the population (63 per cent) said they had never actively pirated content. The quantitative research, commissioned by the Intellectual Property Awareness Foundation (IPAF), has found that about one-quarter of the population actively download or stream content illegally. They list 19 other online sources but none are mentioned by more than 10 per cent of the research respondents: Youtube, Google, Limewire, Isohunt, iTunes, Megavideo, Demonoid,, megaupload,, , movie2K, Kat.ph, Vuze,, ,,. ![]() New research shows that 21 per cent of Australia’s illegal downloaders most often use Swedish website The Pirate Bay to get their film and television content. ![]()
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