Wondering a little. FCC recently mandated fees for Internet radio "broadcasters", based on the number of listeners. However, there are emergent technologies for P2P broadcasting, where some of the clients act as broadcasters themselves, "retranslating" the stream. This way it may not be technically possible for the broadcaster itself to know the number of listeners -> impossible to assess the fees -> impossible to getting reliably proved the number of listeners to. What can happen then? Similar with FCC decency rules they recently tightened after the "Superbowl Boob Incident". How can the FCC execute their jurisdiction over a distributed struture, where there is no official registered owner of the station? Can they go after the volunteering DJs, or after the listeners? How would look a good, decentralized structure for allowing pseudonymous IP stream "broadcast" with minimal resources, the ultimate Internet Pirate Radio station?