Lonman wrote:
They are only combating piracy of their own product, nothing more.
That would only be true ... if they actually had product. They really don't (anymore). All they have is a trademark. "Their own product" was sold off to Stingray almost 10 years ago.
And as far as "reasonable numbers" or anything else like that is concerned, one only has had to be in the business for a substantial time to "know" what numbers really represent. People like Lonnie, Harryoke, Cueball who have been around this for 20 or more years.
Back in 1997, with the advent of Goldenhawk cd duplication software and "Disc Juggler", I suggested (more than once) that manufacturer's should boost the price of their products to put them out of range of home users thereby ensure that the product went only to professionals (with other requirements and restrictions too). That idea was shot down pretty darn quick and for a good (economic) reason.
Tom Viveros of Stellar Records explained at that time --- almost 20 years ago --- why manufacturers were so interested in selling to a home market. In a nutshell, and paraphrasing, he said that; "It's simple; home consumers overall purchase far more discs than KJ's do. However, KJ's purchase
more discs at one time and have larger collections than home users, BUT there are
far fewer of them."
It's a numbers game and not rocket science. It doesn't take a formula to figure it out either. Just take a look at the current demands of KJ's these days: They want to purchase on an ala-carte basis AND they don't want to spend more than 1 or 2 bucks maximum for the latest/greatest tracks with superb sounding audio and dead-on sweeps and deliver on-demand downloads.
Would you want to be a supplier with those constraints these days?
(There is only one reason to do so, but that's a whole different story.)