It would funny to upload thousands of binary blobs, or your own copyrighted material and see if they get taken down. Is there any provisions for entrapment style actions in the DCMA? (sorry not from US) You could then take them to court.
@xg4bx: I think your post echoes many peoples odd logic around this topic (which I personally find to be a false logic). My contention comes down to this. You don't have to consume said book/song/tv show etc. It is in many ways a luxury item. If you can't afford that $100 novella don't read it. If you breach someone’s copyright (I really don't like the word pirate, it is so loaded now), then just accept that you are breaking the law in most countries and depriving the people who hold the legal rights due compensation... anything beyond that is just the stories people tell themselves. Btw. Not judging you, just saying that people seem to have overly complex narratives around this topic.
I personally think copyright law is where the real issue lays, and that the abstracts of the physical world don't translate well to the digital where everything is infinitely copy-able...... but then I'm leading us down a rat hole so I'll stop.
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