We are talking about what is legal and what is not legal. I am not presently interested in saying whether or not the law should be as it it, nor am I presently interested in saying whether or not I abide by the law.
The reason for discussing what the law is, in this context, is in order to prevent accidental violations of the law. Since, by law, ignorance of the law is no excuse, it is good to know the law well enough to avoid problems. That is why I gave a link to a Wikipedia article about copyright violations, instead of a link to some abstruse on line legal document. I wanted to provide enough information for the practical use of most people, not a precise lesson in the law. Still, almost any discussion of the law, even in general terms, tends to start sounding pedantic very quickly.
I am not presently interested in saying that one should abide by the law. I am simply interested in the accurate depiction of what the law is. Whether you or anyone else chooses to violate the law is a matter for the authorities, and is not presently my concern.
Copyright violation is considered to be a form of theft, as one is stealing the intellectual property of someone else. It is not the physical object to which one retains rights when one owns a copyright; rather, it is the information contained in the object to which the copyright owner retains rights. Thus, when you buy a CD, you own the physical object, and can give it away, sell it, destroy it, or add it to a collage that you are making as an art project, and the copyright owner cannot stop this. But, the copyright owner retains the rights to the information contained on the CD, which is why copying and distributing the information on a copyrighted CD (and most CDs are copyrighted) without permission is illegal.
The rights to the information that are retained by a copyright owner are not absolute; in the U.S., typically one may make a backup copy and there are "fair use" exceptions to allow for use of some of the material under certain circumstances; see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use
Such things can get complicated and messy, and under certain circumstances, whether a copyright law has been broken or not may be the subject of debate even among legal scholars. I am not interested in pursuing this subject to such a point as that.
To take us back to how I started in this thread, it was simply a reaction to a misstatement you made regarding copyright law. All I was interested in doing was correcting that matter. I am not interested in discussing whether or not the law should be as it is, nor am I presently interested in discussing the morality of breaking copyright laws.