AkDJ,
He's being held for distributing an access control circumvention device, which unlike kiddie Pr0n is not illegal to create, or own. It is at this point illegal to distribute in America, but the reasons why that law is bad is a seperate rant entirely.
Specifically, he broke the part of the Ebook that dictates how (read aloud, or just text), where (which PC), you could access a work you purchased legally. This is very alarming!
Would you ever take seriously a shrinkwrap license on the cover a real book that said that under penalty of law you could only read that book using GE lights, and that you have no other first sale rights ?
That is exactly the step taht Adobe is trying to take with thier Ebooks. Content producers have for years tried legal methods of abrogating first sale rights (reselling, loaning, etc.) to no avail. Now they are using technology to do it.
Your second point about Americans buying the software is very good. The fault in the logic is that it ignores the question of why the responsibility for ensuring legal compliance of american citizens should fall on a russian company, and not the american government ? If the loctions of the purchasers butts are important, why not the sellers bellybutton as well ?
The implications of such a scheme are important, as you hold the merchant responsible for keeping track of every law, in every jurisdiction the world over. This is very clearly untenable, and not currently how it is done.
Also, you fail to consider the technical limitations (IP_Masq, NAT, etc.) of fixing an IP address in meatspace. France has been trying for years, with little success.
TK/Diche