Study: Teens, Boomers Disagree About P2Ps

  • June 21, 2005
Teenagers and adults in their 20s view peer-to-peer networks far more favorably than consumers who are older than 30, according to a report released Monday by the Toronto-based Solutions Research Group. The study--based on a May telephone survey of 1,062 U.S. respondents ages 12 and older--found that more than half (57 percent) of consumers between the ages of 12 and 19, and exactly 50 percent of respondents in their 20s, indicated that file-sharing services should be allowed. At the same time, the majority (51 percent) of respondents age 30 and over indicated that such services should be outlawed. -- Shankar Gupta
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