If you *really* read copyright law, you'd see that I wasn't doing anything wrong. I know that with the whole of my being. Everything I made fell within the "Fair Use" guidelines (I only displayed a fraction of each of their telecasts), and they were for educational purposes (all of Bradford's throws over 15 yards, all of Gibson's catches, etc). The highlight videos I made were transitive in nature (changed enough from the original to constitute a new production), and I wasn't cutting into the market share of the NFL by making them. Copyright law can't be reviewed in mass. It has to be a case-by-case basis, so that's why they force their hand with YouTube who caved under the pressure. The problem is, I'd have to fight the NFL in court to prove it because YouTube doesn't fight on behalf of the NFL when you register a counter claim with them. And who the hell's gonna do that? It would be me and my guy Brian against the legion of NFL attorneys. They'd bankrupt me before it ever went to court.