One very simple question for you: if this whole system is so evil, why would you want to participate in it in *any* way what-so-ever? Surely forming a parasitical relationship with a corrupt entity is not as productive as working towards a better alternative? 
I do not participate in anything to do with the RIAA. I don't purchase music, nor pirate it. I'm happy to live an existence free from crappy pop culture and premanufactured shite music. And even if I did enjoy it, I'd be content not wasting my hard earned dollars giving money to decadent drug-abusing rock and pop stars. There are far better things (and needier people) to give my money to in this world.
I do not pirate music, nor movies. While I don't consider the digital distribution of entertainment media *illegal* per se (certainly not compared to some of the blatant crime that occurs every day in business), I certainly do not participate in such a thing. You've made yourself one almighty conclusive leap there, my friend.
And for the record, I'm an Australian. I live in a country that up until recently has been relatively free of draconian US-style "kick down your door with gun in hand" copyright enforcement. But sadly, our government here has taken a turn for the worse, and begun free trade negotiations with the US. Something that will cripple our pharmecutical and software industries (plus many, many others) if it goes ahead (which it looks like it inevitably will, much to the disgust of the majority of Australians). To date our leaders have been intelligent enough to avoid the DMCA like the plague, but I fear in a rampant desire to kiss Bush's arse, that might not last either.
Again, copyright was brought about in an attempt to help inventors be more confortable with bringing their ideas out in public. It was a way of preventing others stealing the ideas and profiting from it before the original and legal inventor had a chance to put a particular thing into production.
Fast forward a few hundred years, and we are in an era where all the ideas are owned by the people with the biggest bank balance. And with great wealth comes great corruption. 60% of all music piracy in the United States today is done by organised crime. Not the knee-cap whacking crimelords of yesteryear, but the intelligent and organised bootlegging communities who keep tidy profits from their efforts. Yet the RIAA and MPAA are much happier to put the heat on students and grandmas then they are puttig their efforts towards legitimate means of tackling real media-based crime head on.
Beyond that, the world is screaming for legal digital distribution. As of a few weeks back, Apple announced that there are now more people downloading and paying for music via iTunes than there are people pirating the same songs. If it's easier to pay than steal, people will pay. That was Steve Jobs' motto from the beginning, and he's stuck with it.
Meanwhile, the RIAA have sat on their fat arses for half a generation, and ignored the digital world. Instead of innovating and moving forward like everyone else, they've sat back and sued everyone who decides that copying a CD is easier than buying one. They well and truly missed the digital-music boat, and instead of admitting to their mistakes, they intend to make life painful for anyone who wants to move forwards.
Beyond that, the world is facing even greater issues with copyright. The EU is *STILL* considering software patents despite the ECONOMIC MAJORITY opposing them. And imposed (not elected) office being bribed by the wealthy few is trying to further impose laws that will harm the many. If software patents go ahead, gadget creators like Apple and their iPod will most likely face the reality of paying huge sums of money to existing patent holders for the technologies embedded in their devices. This in turn means higher prices for production, which translates to money out of the consumer's pockets. People like the RIAA who run around buying patent rights get nice and fat, while the people doing all the hard work and INVENTING the technologies get a kick in the bum. Between you and I, it's a total reversal of what copyright was intended to do.
I say again: theft means removing something physically from someone's possession. Theft of something as intangible as an *idea* is a terribly difficult thing to prove. Communication is the essence of humanity. No other creature on earth has the power we do to accurately communicate such advanced and abstract concepts to another of it's kind. Culminations of ideas are what has brought the human race to where it is today. Yet the laws that originally intended to protect this process are now being abused to halt this progress so that no-one can AFFORD to become greater than the current corporate leaders such as the RIAA, MPAA, and publishers who are all quite frankly leeches and money shufflers for the real hard workers, who end up with a meanial percentage instead of their fair share.
And beyond all of that, ignoring the semantics and political BS, I can't for the life of me figure out why people want to waste so much time on that crap when, as I mentioned before, we are talking about people who own MILLIONS, if not BILLIONS of dollars and we're crying that THEY are losing money? It takes US$16 to clothe and educate an African child for an entire year. Sixteen who dollars for an entire year. That's less than 5 cents a day. Now there's something worthy of media attention, and not some pop idol's latest drug habit or boob job. And there's something worth the money, not some overpriced CD. And those are some real financial figures, not the rubbish "losses" claimed by the RIAA due to piracy every year, despite always making more profits than the year previous.
The world has gone mad with greed and gluttony. It disgusts me.