Perhaps...
...Jeff has become accustomed to the availability to copy and paste works published on the web. I don't know if that is the case, but even if it is, many people lose sight of the fact that everything published, once it is published, is copyrighted even when that fact isn't specifically noted within the article, photo or video.
All of the work I publish on the web is available for free use by anyone accessing the websites that contain my work. That free use is only granted for personal use, not for reproduction or redistribution in any manner. When anyone copies and pastes my (or my colleagues') work, a swift email is sent to the website administrator to remove the material from their site. If the material is posted on a message board, the email to the website administrator is accompanied by a post in the offending forum thread to tell the offending poster to link to the material instead of copying it. The companies that put up the funds that allow my employer to write my paychecks do so because my work is a reason for potential customers to visit their websites. Remove that traffic by stealing my work and I'm out of a job. Of course there are a few exceptions, but all of those exceptions are quite easy to spot. There will be a live "print" button included on those specific pages. Even then, the ability to print the page is only for personal use, not for republication or redistribution. Permission to copy intellectual property from the original publisher is the only way such use is not stealing.