Free data sharing is here to stay.

Cory Doctorow.
Guardian Unlimited.

The information economy is here - but governments and business are still 
obsessed with 'protecting' information, rather than making it more 
productive.

Since the 1970s, pundits have predicted a transition to an "information 
economy". The vision of an economy based on information seized the 
imaginations of the world's governments. For decades now, they have been 
creating policies to "protect" information — stronger copyright laws, 
international treaties on patents and trademarks, treaties to protect 
anti-copying technology.

The thinking is simple: an information economy must be based on buying 
and selling information. Therefore, we need policies to make it harder 
to get access to information unless you've paid for it.

That means that we have to make it harder for you to share information, 
even after you've paid for it. Without the ability to fence off your 
information property, you can't have an information market to fuel the 
information economy.

But this is a tragic case of misunderstanding a metaphor. Just as the
industrial economy wasn't based on making it harder to get access to 
machines, the information economy won't be based on making it harder to 
get access to information. Indeed, the opposite seems to be true: the 
more IT we have, the easier it is to access any given piece of 
information — for better or for worse.

more...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/sep/18/informationeconomy
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