Not necessarily, JD. The music side of the business has effectively given up on the copying issue; they've lost the war, although if you go to some piracy-rife territories, like South Africa, even CDs are Copy Protected so you can't stick 'em on your pod.
Most of the holding companies are the same anyway (Universal, Sony etc) and they've all said that they won't get burned again. Movies are their last stand and they're going to fight with all their (substantial) resources.
Yes, of course, major pirates are a target and will continue to be so. But if you look at what they tried to do with music, they certainly will go after a few individuals with more than a few titles on their hard drives.
To my mind, a hundred plus is more than a few.....
Going forward, some titles (I Am Legend, for example) now have limited copying included on the disc itself as part of the purchase price as a way of both controlling copies but also showing a legal willingness to accept "limited" copying to any prospective court.
Their message is "Yes. You can copy. Yes. You can download. But only when we say you can and where we can control the process."
Oddly, Macrovison was cracked pretty early on in the life of DVD. As I understand it, Blu-Ray copy protection, and region-coding still have to be hacked, and that's one of the reasons why the Studios are putting substantial money behind the format. It's secure and they can CONTROL it.