The availability of digital channels for media distribution has raised several important questions
for marketers, notably whether digital distribution channels will cannibalize physical sales and
whether legitimate digital distribution channels will dissuade consumers from using (illegitimate)
digital piracy channels. We address these two questions using the removal of NBC content from
Apple’s iTunes store in December 2007, and its restoration in September 2008, as natural shocks
to the supply of legitimate digital content, and analyzing its impact on demand through
BitTorrent piracy channels and the Amazon.com DVD store.
To do this we collect two large datasets from Mininova and Amazon.com documenting levels of
piracy and DVD sales for both NBC and other major networks’ content around these events. We
analyze this data in a difference-in-difference model and find that NBC’s decision to remove its
content from iTunes in December 2007 is causally associated with an 11.2% increase in the
demand for pirated content. This is roughly equivalent to an increase of 49,000 downloads a day
for NBC’s content and is approximately twice as large as the total legal purchases on iTunes for
the same content in the period preceding the removal. We also find evidence of a smaller, and
statistically insignificant, decrease in piracy for the same content when it was restored to the
iTunes store in September 2008. Finally, we see no change in demand for NBC’s DVD content
at Amazon.com associated with NBC’s closing or reopening of their digital distribution channel
on iTunes.