I can now finally erase this topic from my list of stuff we should stop talking about, but does this make RIAA any less evil? Unfortunately, no. They're simply refocusing on pressuring ISPs to punish their users whenever RIAA decides they deserve it. You're sharing music over the internet? They'll monitor you, they'll hunt you down, and they'll (at least that's one of the suggestions I'm seeing) take away your access to the Internet.
I wrote, at length, what I think about private corporations pressuring ISPs to remove (under any conditions) people's right to access the Internet. In a word: it's bad. Secondly, I maintain the (possibly controversial) position that not all file sharing and not all music sharing can inherently be called illegal or immoral, and that many corporations that own rights over intellectual property have gone way too far in defining certain activities as illegal; a good example is Sony's publicly stated position that copying your own CD to your computer is illegal. Finally, I definitely maintain the position that monitoring people's activities on the Internet by private, for-profit corporations under any circumstances is a horrible idea.