IMHO, it was probably part of their strategy all along. Call it phase 2. They had to know public pressure would build against them with their heavy-handed tactics, plus they would never be able to re-coup their legal fees incurred from suing thousands of file swappers, the majority of whom are young (early twenties) or still in school.
So they target a relative few people to make an example of, and then hope that the FUD (fear uncertainty and doubt) factor will scare most people into being "grateful" they're not already on the list and have an out. It also gives them the ability to argue that they are making a reasonable compromise and inviting people to recognize the error of their ways. I would think it may even strengthen their case if they choose to pursue offenders after they've already offered an amnesty that was rejected.
Either way, the whole thing's ridiculous.
Also, tracking IP addresses from the EFF site (which would never happen, if you're at all familiar with that organization's mission and the fact that they've been the biggest obstacle standing in the RIAA's way) would not empower the RIAA to start pursuing users who are just checking to see if they're on the list. It would never hold up under legal scrutiny. Besides, they've already got their list of offenders to pursue with the records to back it up.
Just throwing in my $0.02 again...!
KV
