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On the eve of my 70th birthday, John Perry Barlow, who was 4 months older and 
sometimes described as my "nemesis," passed away.  RIP, cyber-comrade.  In the 
interest of living memories, here's a JPB story (or two).

In mid-1994, the Progress and Freedom Foundation (PFF) -- which was a spin-off 
from Newt Gingrich's GOPAC political action committee -- published its 
"Cyberspace and the American Dream: A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age," just 
ahead of Newt's sweeping election victory in November, making him Speaker of 
the House.  It was written by Esther Dyson, George Gilder, George "Jay" 
Keyworth, and Alvin Toffler (whose protege Newt had once been in his West 
Georgia Esalen days) and it began with "The central event of the 20th century 
is the overthrow of matter . . . "
In mid-1995, PFF threw its coming-out party with what became an annual "Aspen 
Summit" at the St. Regis.  According to PFF, "Wired News has compared the Aspen 
Summit to the annual Davos event in Switzerland and the Renaissance Weekend at 
Hilton Head."  Both John and I were among the 20+ invited speakers in 1995, 
sitting at the main tables, surrounded by an audience of 200-or-so.  By that 
time, John and I had known each other from from events like Esther's "PC 
Forum," where I had made a nuisance of myself by questioning the basis for John 
and Mitch Kapor's Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF, formed in 1990).
Sometime between my invitation and the PFF Summit, it had been decided that I 
was a "trouble-maker," so the conference chair, Jeff Eisenach had pre-arranged 
with John (who later told me he brought my troubling behavior to Jeff's 
attention) to block my ability to speak.  Everyone was supposed to raise their 
hand and Jeff would make a list -- however, whenever I raised my hand so did 
John and when Eisenach went through the list he skipped me and called on John 
and not me.  My response was to cross my arms and pull my hat down over my 
eyes, in silent protest.
CSPAN cameras were rolling and, little did I know, Debbie Newman, with whom I'd 
had one "date" was watching.  We had met at a "Cybersuds" party for NYNMA, 
where perhaps 3,000+ (including John and his entourage) danced the night away 
at the Roxy and Debbie wanted to meet whoever "started this party."  Apparently 
my "bad boy" demonstration caught her eye so when I invited her to join me on 
Nantucket -- where I went after Aspen to write an "expose" on 
Toffler/Grigrich's "Anticipatory Democracy" movement (later circulated 
privately on the Hill and contributing to Newt's ouster) --  she agreed.  As I 
recall, we played some Grateful Dead on the beach.
Twenty-three years later, we're still together.  Thanks John (I couldn't have 
done it myself) . . . !!
Mark

P.S. In mid-1996, I got an out-of-the-blue phonecall from Budapest.  It was 
Diana McCarthy on the line and she said "How would you like to come to Budapest 
to speak at our MetaForum III conference?  We've got a plane ticket ready for 
you!" (paid for by a local Internet entrepreneur interested in my Wall Street 
insights).  I had never heard of nettime but agreed to show up and "keynote" -- 
around which festivities Debbie and I then planned to tour the capitals of the 
Holy Roman Empire: Vienna, Prague and Budapest (where we stayed in a suite at 
the Gellert and enjoyed their Art Noveau baths).
Once again, I have John Barlow to thank.  Earlier that year, while at Davos, 
John had penned his "Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace" (following 
through on the "Magna Carta" theme)  -- which began by saying "Governments of 
the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I come from 
Cyberspace, the new home of the Mind . . . "  This got John an invitation to 
MetaForum II and, according to reports, he drove there from Davos in a 
convertible with "two blonds."   Apparently John didn't make a very good 
impression -- so I was invited to the next event as the anti-Barlow.  The only 
blond I brought along was Debbie.
Diana kindly invited me to join the nettime "Zentral Kommittee," where I 
learned that the local Soros group had told nettime they couldn't do this 
anymore unless they folded into the OSF efforts (leading to the 1997 "Beauty 
and the East" at Soros' offices in Llubljana).  In Budapest, I also met Richard 
Barbrook (leading to my 1996 "Wired Magazine and the English Ideology" reply to 
his "Californian Ideology") and Manuel Delanda (leading to our jointly 
organized 1998-2000 "Non-Linear Circle" salon, from which he quickly dropped 
out).  Erik Davis was also there (talking up his "Techgnosis") and Debbie, 
Manuel, Erik and I stuffed into a cab to drive out to the Stalinist-era "Statue 
Park." 
Perhaps because I video-taped some of the conference (tourist that I was), many 
involved decided that I must have been working for the CIA -- which Diana asked 
me about when we happened into each other again in Budapest in 2004.  "No," I 
told her, "although I did once do a 'job' for them, warning Bill Gates that the 
1998 Microsoft anti-trust case was actually aimed at him -- since he had been 
declared a 'national security threat' for refusing to put serious security into 
Windows."  I got a nice 10-course dinner with Nathan Myrvold out of that (plus 
a "veiled" writeup in PC Magazine, since the NYTimes wasn't interested) and had 
some fun with Joel Klein (who "ran" the DoJ side of the case, which was 
actually managed by those who he said "gave me a secret code to follow what 
they were doing.")
RIP, cyber-comrade, those were good times  . . . <g>
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