This article higlights the decline in CD sales in America, particularly during the course of this year. It presents the depressing figures of aggregate album sales and distinguishes the stand-out major record companies and recording artists who lead in a not so impressive track record for 2005. Thus the articles shows how technological advancement has deleteriously affected traditional physical distribution.
This article provides a lot of quantifiable information regarding aggregate online sales, total industry revenues and projects estimates for up to the next three years. The article says that though online distribution has taken the music industry by storm, album sales still account for the majority of record sales. There is still more room for online distribution to increase and CD sales to further decrease. Therefore the article urges the industry to continue to reconsider the way it does business and in addition suggests that "governments will have to think hard about regulatory structures." .
This article makes note of the decline in US CD sales in the past four years and highlights figures released by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). The decline is attributed to Internet downloading because it has dramatically changed the way music is obtained and sold. In addition to acknowledging legal downloading the article spends time discussing illegal downloading of music through peer-to-peer file sharing systems. Also there is a discussion of the "big box stores" such as Best Buy and Wal-Mart that serve as the most successful music retailers presently.

