After a decade-long battle to prevent illegal file-sharing, the beleaguered music industry has finally agreed to give fans what they’ve always demanded - an unlimited supply of free legal songs. Illegal music downloads have jumped up over the last few years due to increasing access to CD replication hardware/software and high speed broadband internet.

With CD sales falling and legal downloads yet to bridge the gap, the industry has decided to embrace the file-sharing technology, albeit with reluctance since it almost threatened to strike at its roots. Digital service Qtrax has just announced that it would come up with a catalogue of over 25 million songs to be downloaded to retain, free - without any restriction on the number of tracks.

The service has been endorsed by most leading record companies, including Universal Music, Warner Music and EMI, which have fought file-sharers in the courts to stop piracy. The gamble is that music fans won’t mind some amount of advertising around jukebox of the Qtrax website in lieu of authorised use of almost all songs available. The service will make use of the ‘peer-to-peer’ network that comprises not only hit songs but rarities & live tracks from the world’s popular artists. It is felt that incompatibility with the iPod player won’t put music lovers off, though Qtrax has already mentioned of an ‘iPod solution’ to be made public in April 2008.

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