The latest traffic numbers are in, and stream ripping website YouTube-mp3 and torrent site the Pirate Bay now outrank the two most popular music streaming services, Spotify and Pandora, in total web traffic. In fact, YouTube-mp3 shot past former top-ranked music site SoundCloud to become the number 1 visited music website worldwide.

If anyone's still wondering whether the stream ripping phenomenon has taken hold, the latest worldwide top music and audio website listings should leave no doubt. The first and most popular stream ripping website, Youtube-mp3.org, has galloped past former number 1 site SoundCloud to nab the top spot among music websites, knocking SoundCloud into the number 2 position.

At number 3 is the Pirate Bay, confirming that the torrent destination has regained its top status as the most popular site of its kind worldwide despite the recent rather peculiar assertion otherwise in a recent MPAA report to the U.S. government on notorious markets.

Holding down the number 4 and 5 spots are Spotify and Pandora, respectively. Spotify, the world's top on-demand music streaming service, has the advantage of being available in most of Europe and the Americas as well as parts of Asia. Pandora, its radio-based streaming competitor, is currently only available in the United States, Australia and New Zealand. The company has plans to change that, however, as it plans an eventual worldwide expansion in tandem with its upcoming initial public offering set to take place next year. Pandora is also nipping at Spotify's heels, preparing to introduce an on-demand streaming service of its own, expected to debut in the coming months.

The biggest shocker in the listing, however, comes from the rise in the popularity of stream ripping services. In addition to the top-ranking YouTube-mp3.org, another such website, convert2mp3.net, comes in at number 6 on the list.

While the media has been touting the recent meteoric rise in the number of music streaming service subscribers and noting that a sharp drop in digital downloads has occurred as a result, we've been reporting that the drop is likely also attributable to the increase in stream ripping.

A recent study showed that 30 percent of all web users, including half of those aged 16 to 24, engage in the practice, and the new traffic rankings offer additional proof of its popularity.

Also confirming the rise of stream ripping is the fact that the three big music labels — Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment — have just filed a huge lawsuit against YouTube-mp3, claiming that it is violating copyright laws.

Stream ripping websites argue that the practice is in fact legal and that their function is essentially the same as that of the once-ubiquitous cassette recorder. Even if the court rules in favor of the music industry, it will be difficult for them to enforce the ruling and prevent the practice. Anyone who doubts that needs to just look again at the aforementioned traffic rankings, where the Pirate Bay remains comfortably nested at number 3 despite all the gargantuan efforts on the part of the film and music industries to destroy it.

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