“Content,” huh? Ha! Where’s the container?
Cory Doctorow, our ‘renegade information plumber’, is launching his first collection of essays on ‘everything form copyright and DRM to the layout of phone-keypads, the fallacy of the semantic web, the nature of futurism, the necessity of privacy in a digital world, the reason to love Wikipedia, the miracle of fanfic, and many other subjects’.
As expected from Cory, the new book (Content: Selected Essays on Technology, Creativity, Copyright, and the Future of the Future) digital versions are available, without charge, at the same time that the print versions are published. He is innovating on reward models, so if you want to donate something you can do so by buying a copy for a librarian or teacher — and teachers and librarians can request a copy for their institution.
The book was designed by typography legend John D Berry, and presents a fine introduction from our good friend John Perry Barlow (photo), which I found provocative enough for me to publish it here.
John Perry Barlow
San Francisco — Seattle — Vancouver — San Francisco
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
“Content,” huh? Ha! Where’s the container?
Perhaps these words appear to you on the pages of a book, a physical object that might be said to have “contained” the thoughts of my friend and co-conspirator Cory Doctorow as they were transported in boxes and trucks all the way from his marvelous mind into yours. If that is so, I will concede that you might be encountering “content.” (Actually, if that’s the case, I’m delighted on Cory’s behalf, since that means that you have also paid him for these thoughts. We still know how to pay creators directly for the works they embed in stuff.)
But the chances are excellent that you’re reading these liquid words as bit-states of light on a computer screen, having taken advantage of his willingness to let you have them in that form for free. In such an instance, what “contains” them? Your hard disk? His? The Internet and all the servers and routers in whose caches the ghosts of their passage might still remain? Your mind? Cory’s?








