Leaked in London is a live extended play recorded by the American rock band Fall Out Boy in 2007 and issued as a limited downloadable bonus to purchasers of their fourth studio album, Infinity on High. The EP title refers both to its London origins and to the circumstance that prompted its release: the album for which it served as a purchaser reward had surfaced on the internet several weeks ahead of the official release.

Overview

The recording captures performances from the band's shows in London and was offered not as a mass-market retail product but as an exclusive digital extra. Fans who bought Infinity on High were able to obtain the live EP through a redemption system that required the physical CD and an accompanying piece of software.

Distribution and access

Access to the EP depended on a CD-based verification tool known as CDPass. By inserting the Infinity on High disc into a computer and running the supplied software, customers could download the live tracks. This method tied the digital bonus to legitimate purchasers and served both as a promotional incentive and as a partial response to the advance online leak.

Characteristics and contents

  • Format: live EP made available as digital downloads rather than a separate physical release.
  • Recording location: performances in London during the 2007 period surrounding the album's promotion.
  • Purpose: exclusive bonus for purchasers and a goodwill gesture to fans affected by the album leak.

The release exemplified mid-2000s strategies by artists and labels to add value to physical purchases at a time when unauthorized leaks and file-sharing were common concerns.

Context and significance

While not a major commercial release, Leaked in London is notable as an early example of leveraging bundled digital extras to encourage legitimate sales and to engage an online audience. It reflects how bands experimented with technology and distribution options in the transition from physical to digital music consumption. The EP remains a footnote in the band's discography, illustrating how artists responded creatively to the challenges of leaking and piracy in the 2000s.