It makes me laugh when record labels blame downloading for the decline in single sales. They shot themselves in the foot when they started releasing crappy Now [insert number here] compilation albums. Why buy 5 top singles when you can get about 30 for the same money? That's what started the decline. Likewise, the average commercial punter will buy a Gatecrasher or MoS CD with 18-20 2-3 minute mixes rather than go out and search for a single they like. It used to piss me right off when I would buy an album like that, and then find that practically every compilation out for the next 6-12 months would have practically the same tracks on it. Greed is the key here, and I don't mean the consumers. I also read an article online (I think I still have the link somewhere- I'll try to dig it out), where the MIAA was trying to bully people caught downloading music into paying the about $8 per track to settle out of court. Of course people are going to end up in court as a result, and of course people are going to resent the recording industry aswell. I have downloaded music in the past, and I might well do so again, but I only downloaded full-length versions of mixes that I already had copies of. Why the hell shouldn't I have the full version of tracks that I've already bought and paid for? If I had the skills I'd do my own 'extended mix' versions of the tracks I like, but I don't. What I don't do is download obscure stuff that I like, like psy-trance. I will pay for that, as I know that the labels make little, if any profits. But I hardly think that a person downloading Tiesto's latest stuff, or Paul van Dyk's or whoever's is going to harm them personally.