Hmmm. Now there's a thought.
Y'know all those masses of distorted tracks that the RIAA sticks on KaZaA?
Wouldn't that constitute illegally providing copy-righted material?
"Well, of course not. It's their stuff", I hear you cry. Also, because it's distorted it's no longer the copy-righted material, correct?
So, if you took the clear pieces from several of these files and pieced them together, would it still be illegal?
Technically, it'd be no more illegal than playing Amerian Pie on your guitar at home. You'd be playing parts of files that were free from copy-right. And even if the re-made file was to be considered the same as an original CD-rip, the RIAA would be the ones providing it to you.
Hmmm, indeed.
EDIT: I've had another flash of brilliance.
Put 'Microsoft' in all the file descriptions of the real files.
So people only need search for whatever they want and add Microsoft to the search words.
The only way the RIAA could counter this would be to start adding 'Microsoft' to the file descriptions, at which point Microsoft (or whatever trademarked company name you saw fit to use) could sue the goddamn **** outta them in some kind of anti-trust suit. As the RIAA would be purposely damaging the Microsoft name to improve their record sales.