The thing is..
Do the publishers REALLY want people to have access to the content before we part with our money? - I think not!
IMO, Even if there was no risk of people copying an album, the mere fact that they could listen to it and make a choice about whether they buy it, would impact the sales for a large percentage of the crap which they can shift because people fall for the advertising and hype.
It has been this way for a long time - the marketing machine working to push the acts they want to sell, and less mainstream music being sidelined until it sprung up, against all the odds to assume a "status" which gave it enough "importance" to be of interest (financially)..
This is where "pirate" radio played such a huge role (or certainly did in my life, where both the regime in SA and the market would never have imported anything "stronger" than the Carpenters - Buying a Jethro Tull Album like Aqualung was almost as despicable as joining the banned Communist party)-8
But - Reading the history of Radio Caroline, it seems that things were only a little better in the U.K. (and Europe) .. The amount of effort and expense the UK (and other, but mainly the UK) governments went to silence Caroline was astounding - Enacting laws to extend the territorial reach into the ocean where the 'pirates' were moored, making supply of goods to the vessels a criminal offense, and then even passing laws to allow boarding of "pirate radio" ships operating from international waters and registered by a foriegn nation! Piracy ?! The only real pirates were the thugs who implemented these laws!
.... All so that the government could control what people heard, and so that the music industry could be protected from the undermining effect this had on what THEY wanted to promote and sell. Nobody could make a decent copy of from any of the pirate broadcasts - but, after listening, people could choose to buy the music they really liked.
And when people can discover what they REALLY like, thats when the majority of the music industry thinks it is at greatest danger... Possibly because the Exec's dont have a musical bone in their boddies, and deep in their souls are nothing more than crooked used-car salesmen, who think that they can get more from s(l)ick advertising and cons than by providing a good product which the consumer really wants, at a fair price.
(or perhaps they know something that I probably know, but am not comfortable believing - they know that the vast majority of the population like what they are told to like.. that the majority of consumers can be programmed.. That the real game is making the programming as effective as possible - and the real threat is the de-programming effect which [particularly "subversive"] art can have on people)
Fred.