It seems that while many do their best to share copyrighted files the team at BayTSP do their best to have it taken off the net in the never ending cat and mouse battle.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070808-alook-into-the-lives-of-viacoms-copyright-police.htmlDigital copyright protection company BayTSP believes it will always have a place in the copyright-protection ecosystem.
BayTSP is currently employed by Viacom for over $100,000 per month—other companies pay up to $500,000 per month—for its services. For that money, BayTSP sends out over a million takedown notices every month and says that clips are often removed within a couple of hours.
For eight hours a day, BayTSP's employees search through the millions of clips uploaded to YouTube and other video sites, log lists of videos they believe to be infringing, and send DMCA takedown notices
Don't go thinking that viewing YouTube clips for a living is as glamorous as it sounds, though. Employees describe their $11 per hour days as monotonous, as it often involves watching the same clip (or variations thereof) thousands of times apiece
What was the old bible saying about selling someone out for 10 peices on silver, it seems eleven is the going rate