Quite a few producers and publishers have indicated that that is exactly what they think.
Then let them give their stuff away?
Steve wants to give his stuff away, so let's take MGMs library.
And I think it's absolutely adorable that you are taking the term "witch-hunt" and taking it in seriousness. This ain't the inquisitions we're talking about here; I've got a few definitions related to more than just burning innocents at the stake.
Wait, you used the term witch hunt and DIDN'T mean a scenario where innocent people were caught up in mass hysteria and phony trials?
You meant witch hunt as in tons of people illegally downloading copyrighted material? How did I miss the connection?

Where have I stated anywhere that I wanted your personal information, or the personal information of anyone else?
When you said it was ok to take any of my stuff that you like. You just said the information should be free to everyone.
I'm speaking of "information" in the sense of data which has cultural value.
Oh so only stuff you WANT should be free for you. Should you have access to my videos, songs, pictures and stories I make for free?
As to the point material costs money to produce and distribute, well, oddly piracy doesn't seem to have much of an effect on sales, at least in the area of music, and some content producers, like Paulo Coelho, have come to use it as a tool for spreading their market around the globe.
You keep picking that one guy. It's his right to do what he wants with his work. I love how you keep linking to the same place over and over. Not that they might have a bias or anything.
As to the accusation that I want companies to "spend tons of money making things for [my] enjoyment and then just give them away for [my] betterment, I do buy most of the things I download, for the simple reason that having a copy of the source material is always somehow just better because of some nebulous quality than what can be downloaded.
If they're such poor quality, why are people downloading them? I'm gonna guess it doesn't matter to them.
As to cars, groceries, and clothes...how the chuffing hell am I supposed to download a car, fresh produce, and a Slipknot t-shirt?
So because it's a download, it's ok that it's theft?
If your only response to that argument is laughter, then it's a sign that you don't have a counter-argument. We have been here before. For thousands of years, the scribal culture of mankind chose a select few transmit written information across time and space. When the printing press came along, the nations of Europe made it clear that they would be the ones controlling the flow of information; printing presses became outlawed in many jurisdictions of the day and many books deemed illegal to print. And all that for the simple reason that whoever controls the flow of information wields a great deal of power. In the eighteenth century, printed media became a force for change just as BitTorrent is now: printers outside of France would print books deemed illegal in that country and then smuggle their wares across the border. The French Revolution is largely attributed to a result from mass availability of "pirated" content: freedom of opinion and expression.
And then as the means of distribution changed, there was more and more naysaying from the industry. There was a lawsuit registered by a collection of major American movie studios whose representatives stated publicly that "the VCR is to the American movie industry what the Boston Strangler was to a woman alone." And then, the industry could not live without the VCR.
*laughs even harder*
Oh man. I LOVE you guys that think you're on some kind of cultural social movement.
Your big issue with the little printing press example is the stuff you're taking isn't illegal or in any way unobtainable. It's purchasable. People just don't want to because the people are lazy and don't feel like working or paying for what they want. So they turn around and pretend this is some noble cause when it's really just greedy people who want every song, movie and game in existence because they feel they are somehow owed the right to enjoy a work by someone else without giving them anything back for it.
Stop taking greed and laziness and pretending it's some social movement.
The assumption here is that all piracy is bad. The major industries need to change their worldview in order to survive; they have adapted to new distribution methods in the past. The fact they are not reeks of ignorance and a lack of knowledge.
The worldview change is "I want your stuff for free" and these companies are just supposed to go "Ok, you got us, take all our stuff"
You want the entire series of BSG and Family Guy and all the Batman movies and all the songs by so and so and just don't want to pay for it. This culture is not locked away or hidden. It's on TV, the radio, movie theaters, everywhere. You can get anything you want, but you have to pay the people who spent time and money to make it.
You just don't want to do it so you can spend more money on other things. It's greed, plain and simple.