Urg...Illicit devices like the ones targeted today are created with one purpose in mind, subverting copyright protections," said Julie L. Myers, Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. "These crimes cost legitimate businesses billions of dollars annually and facilitate multiple other layers of criminality, such as smuggling, software piracy and money laundering

First, there's the supposed ammount of money lost that's just plain bullshit...Essantially,here's how it works:
1 download = net cash lost. Sooooo...basically if Joe.Average Student downloads 100 000 songs each year, that's effectively 100 000 X x$ "lost". Nevermind that Joe Student never HAD 100 000$ each year to begin with and that his montly budget for music or games has been stable over the years, even long after internet downloads became common...He still would have bought for ...3000$ up to 10M$ in music...given his revenue that's a mathematical impossibility but don't let that stop the big companies...And since we're talking purely immaterial stuff here, you can't claim you have lost cash because no physical object was ever involved. "Research and development" is another issue.
Note: I'm not discussing the legality/illegality or morality/imorality of downloading copyrighted material...that's another matter entirely.
But the fact that big companies are allowed to give any numbers over their supposed "lost" is sick.
Now let's take an even more insane example:
Suppose 10 000 people are downloading a torrent cointaining the whole GoodNES (US and Japan NES games) with something like a thousand unique games in it...How much Nintendo just lost?
Let's see...1000 times...let's round this to 50$ a game so 50 000$ TIMES 10 000 equals...whew... 500M$...crap, half a Billion $...and that's just for the NES library

Same thing for Microsoft, according to them, each pirated copy of Windows is hundred of dollars "lost"... Nevermind that many poorer country basically only have pirated versions...that's still quagillions of dollars they have lost...
Basically, how can you "lost" something you never had? You'd have to prove that all or the majority of these people would have bought the product, and that is of course simply not true.
Again, talking about the number given by the companies...NOT about the legality of pirated software/music.
And secondly...well, don't you know? Big companies like Microsoft DESERVE Zillions of dollars each year...it's a divine right. And also contribute in making a better world, and stuff.