Every day, lawsuits are filed for copyright violation, but usually, the plaintiffs in such suits know who the copyright violator is, or at least where to find them—but thanks to the relative anonymity provided by IP addresses, some content creators have found it nearly impossible to track down those violators—and some courts aren't making it any easier for those owners to protect their intellectual property.In a sense, the problem started with the Prenda Law Group and its attorneys, Paul Hansmeier and John Steele, who hatched a scheme to have hardcore scenes filmed and posted to the internet, and then threatened anyone who downloaded that content with a lawsuit and public humiliation if that user failed to pay Prenda at least a $500 fee to drop the lawsuit. Currently, Hansmeier and Steele are cooling their heels in federal prison as a result of their scheme being found to be illegal.But the Prenda group is hardly the only entity that's been labeled a "copyright troll" by the courts. Perfect 10, the magazine/website that made a cottage industry out of suing various websites like Amazon, Google, Visa/Mastercard, CCBill and even Microsoft for alleged copyright infringement, has also been smacked down by the courts, as has Malibu Media, which filed thousands of lawsuits claiming that various internet users have illegally downloaded its movies, which also sought to get such downloaders to pay a fee to keep a lawsuit from being filed.But one copyright owner that's frequently described as a "copyright troll" but hardly deserves that epithet is Strike 3 Holdings, a company co-owned by award-winning director Greg Lansky, and which owns the rights to the XXX material created for his websites Vixen, Tushy, Blacked, Blacked Raw and others. …and then things took a turn