I know you didn't ask this, but I feel strongly that copy protection schemes are much more of a burden for legitimate users. It's harder for them to back up their software, and harder for them to deploy it in ways that work well for them. For example, in my home network I copy all software on to my Windows Home Server, and put the original CDs out of reach of peanut-buttery-fingers. I lose that for copy-protected software.
An alternative to copy protection is adding non-software value. When someone buys a license to your software, you could include the hardware that it will run on, on-site installation & training, and phone support. Carried to its logical conclusion, you change from a software business to a turnkey solution business. This kind of thing can be fantastic for customer loyalty.
You may also consider inserting fingerprints in to your software. Modify each distributed CD image in a different way (there are always a lot of bits that don't matter). Then when one appears in the wild, you can trace it back to the original source.
Good luck.
