Concept

L'information veut être libre

"Information wants to be free" is an expression that means either that all people should be able to access information freely, or that information (formulated as an actor) naturally strives to become as freely available among people as possible. It is often used by technology activists to criticize laws that limit transparency and general access to information. People who criticize intellectual property law say the system of such government-granted monopolies conflicts with the development of a public domain of information. The expression is often credited to Stewart Brand, who was recorded saying it at a Hackers Conference in 1984. The phrase is attributed to Stewart Brand, who, in the late 1960s, founded the Whole Earth Catalog and argued that technology could be liberating rather than oppressing. What is considered the earliest recorded occurrence of the expression was at the first Hackers Conference in 1984, although the video recording of the conversation shows that what Brand actually said is slightly different. Brand told Steve Wozniak: On the one hand you have—the point you’re making Woz—is that information sort of wants to be expensive because it is so valuable—the right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information almost wants to be free because the costs of getting it out is getting lower and lower all of the time. So you have these two things fighting against each other. Brand's conference remarks are transcribed accurately by Joshua Gans in his research on the quote as used by Steve Levy in his own history of the phrase. A later form appears in his The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at MIT: Information Wants To Be Free. Information also wants to be expensive. ...That tension will not go away. According to historian Adrian Johns, the slogan expresses a view that had already been articulated in the mid-20th century by Norbert Wiener, Michael Polanyi and Arnold Plant, who advocated for the free communication of scientific knowledge, and specifically criticized the patent system.

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Publications associées (1)

Partial Information Sharing Over Social Learning Networks

Ali H. Sayed, Virginia Bordignon

This work addresses the problem of sharing partial information within social learning strategies. In social learning, agents solve a distributed multiple hypothesis testing problem by performing two operations at each instant: first, agents incorporate inf ...
IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC2023
Concepts associés (9)
Culture libre
thumb|right|Lawrence Lessig, à l'origine des licences Creative Commons. La culture libre est un mouvement social et une sous-culture qui promeut la liberté de distribuer et de modifier des œuvres de l'esprit sous la forme d'œuvres libres par l'utilisation d'internet ou, plus rarement, d'autres formes de médias. Il puise sa philosophie dans celle du logiciel libre en l'appliquant à la culture et à l'information, dans des domaines aussi variés que les arts, l'éducation, les sciences, etc..
Hacker ethic
The hacker ethic is a philosophy and set of moral values within hacker culture. Practitioners believe that sharing information and data with others is an ethical imperative. The hacker ethic is related to the concept of freedom of information, as well as the political theories of anti-authoritarianism, anarchism, and libertarianism.
Ouverture (philosophie)
L'ouverture est une position philosophique générale selon laquelle opèrent certains individus et organisations, mise en avant dans différents mouvements philosophiques, culturels, religieux ou politiques. Elle est souvent mise en valeur par des processus de décisions communautaires par la distribution entre les différentes parties (utilisateurs, producteurs, contributeurs, ...) plutôt que par une autorité centralisée (propriétaires, experts, ...) Selon Jamais Cascio : une Singularité se basant sur l'"accès-libre" est une réponse aux risques à venir.
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