And the reality is that is someone wants all the home electronics you own they will steal them. But I seriously doubt you leave all your doors and windows unlocked and open 24/7.
Copy protection does what it's suppose to do. It deters your average consumer from casuallying copying the material. If someone really wants something they will do what it takes to get it. But people still locks their car, their house, put sensitive documents into safes, put up fences, invest in alarm sytems, keep passwords secret, use firewalls, etc.. Why? Because those things are deterents.
If DVDs didn't have macrovision I'd probably have more than a few VHS copies of movies that I would like to own but can't afford to buy right now. But they do so I don't. And I don't want the movies bad enough to spend the time it would take to copy the DVDs. This is the type of situation copy protection safeguards against. Of course companies are going to market copy protection as bullet proof, even though it isn't, because if the average consumer believes it is bullet proof then that is even another added layer of deterence (power precieved is power achieved).
Lethal