
The analysis and theory is supported by the results of a research study carried out by the author in February 2007, which are presented in this paper. The model is then expanded to encompass the Efficient Distribution Theory which argues that, through the application of measures which can be cheaply and easily implemented by the entertainment industries, a number of factors can mitigate any negative effects file sharing may cause to the extent that widely distributing digital copies can be directly beneficial to the industries. An analysis of various theories relating to the routes, impacts and effects of file sharing is applied to a digital distribution model.


This paper argues that the industries, with the assistance of the legislature in certain circumstances, should be focussing their attentions not on limiting the natural evolution being brought about in the digital age, but by recognising that many of the parties labelled as scurrilous pirates are actually a rich market which can be tapped into through alternative means. The ongoing battle between file sharers and the entertainment industries is one which has been largely approached from the point of view of the latter parties with the reasoning that the law should be invoked to clamp down on the distribution of unauthorised copies of works through peer to peer networks.
