(C)opyright Eben Moglen, 1995.
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Mail: moglen@columbia.edu
Ladies and Gentlemen:
It is a great honor to be asked to speak at this session, and I very
much regret that ill-health prevents me from being with you in
person. It is a sobering reflection that no technological
reorganization of scholarship has so far made it possible to avoid
holding our professional meetings in the flu season.
In the prefatory remarks printed in the program I tried--in my role as
a legal historian interested in the effect of information technologies
on the history of the common law--to put our subject today in a
historical perspective. I shall return to that attempt below, but let
me state briefly what I regard as the two most important points.
First, the changes in the technology of human communication now
occurring are the most basic since the invention of writing more than
five thousand years ago. Second, the social changes brought about by
this revolution in the production and distribution of information will
have their earliest effects on scholarship, which is the organized
production of specialized knowledge.
But precisely because our generation stands at the inception of the
revolution, prediction of the larger contours of the forthcoming
changes is extremely difficult. Because it has been my lot to study
the history, to help create some of the technology we now see around
us, and to know some of the "crackpots" whose long-shots are now
crossing the finish line well ahead of the field, I hope I can go some
small way in these remarks toward a unified vision of the process
through which we are living.
I have three different strands of thought to put before you. The
first concerns the media of scholarly communication: past, present and
near future. I shall describe how the current state of the network
reflects the transformation of the media of the past, and the existing
spectrum of possibilities. Second, I shall describe the current state
of scholarly communication in our discipline, which I find to be about
as awful as can be imagined. I shall argue that the absolute mess we
call "the law reviews" is an asset in disguise. The evident inutility
of the law review system frees us, as not all other scholarly
disciplines are free, to consider the wholesale replacement of our
existing publication system. Third, I shall speculate, in terms of
existing technology, on the possible shape of the replacement system,
including some comments on the negative consequences of the current
technological and legal climate. (The previously initiated will
recognize these as the anarchist portion of my remarks.) Finally, I
shall attempt to provide a general vision of the work of legal
scholars at the end of the next generation, describing how what we do
today will determine what our successors will be doing in the second
quarter of the next century.
To a significant extent, our legal scholarship has remained fixed
within this model of converting sequentially-stored dilute information
into useful epitomes conforming to the intellectual prepossessions of
the era. Littleton, Coke, Blackstone and Story--as I labor to make my
students understand in my seminar on the intellectual history of the
treatise tradition--all attempted to articulate the loose bones of the
English law into a skeleton recognizable given the fashions of the
time. Though the forms changed significantly with the eras, each of
these types of scholarship was aimed at overcoming the same
fundamental constraint. In modern jargon, the material of the law is
produced and stored sequentially; the primary goal of legal
scholarship has been to access that material associatively, by linking
temporally displaced segments in topical relations. The scholar,
however awkward it may sound, has been a specialized device for the
performance of a sort and merge operation, either using internal
memory or sorting externally, using whatever equivalent his generation
offered for the three-by-five card.
If the information-theoretic significance of scholarship did not much
change between the time of Bracton and our contemporaries, the primary
problem in the intellectual organization of the law has been to get
the scholar to the raw data to be sorted. In the beginning, as with
those of us who must still make annual journeys to the English Public
Record Office, the solution was to move the scholar around.
Since the European adoption of movable-type printing at the end of the
15th century, however, the technical infrastructure of scholarship has
largely depended on the hope that the distribution of books could
replace the peregrinations of scholars. Scholarship became, as much
as possible, the consultation of static volumes of printed
information, or the rendering of unprinted information suitable for
reprocessing by the printing press. The emphasis was still upon
making associative links between previously compiled sources of more
dilute information.
Along with the process for consultation of sources, scholarship has
consisted also of the process for consultation of other scholars.
This meant either personal travel or the exchange of written
correspondence until the development of technologies for voice
transmission at the turn of the twentieth century. As we all know,
however, the telephone has been more of a barrier to scholarship than
an assistance, and only the development of the answering machine, I
think, has prevented the telephone from extirpating scholarship
altogether.
So, let us now consider what has happened to the media of scholarly
communication. In principle, the infrastructural problems that have
beset scholarship for one thousand years can now be eliminated.
Already digital media directly replacing older analog media are coming
into existence. Email is replacing the point-to-point media such as
snail mail and telephone calls. Broadcast media--including primitive
list servers and the more sophisticated structure of Usenet news--are
beginning to serve some of the purposes previously served by scholarly
pilgrimage, including organizational meetings, collaborative inquiry,
exchange of notes and queries, and the like. Unfortunately, the poor
design and low quality of commercial software threatens the vitiation
of these new media, a point to which I return below.
In addition to new media of personal communication, the network has
begun to resolve a few other problems of data organization. The
linking of library catalogs has made traditional bibliographic
research a trivial task. The fulltext retrieval services, though
inadequate in many important respects, have at least rendered the
basic sources of most legal scholarship accessible from anywhere in
the world where a pair of copper wires is connected to a telephone
switching office. Experiments with more extensive digitization of
library collections, such as Columbia Law School's Project Janus, may
within another generation make possible the global frictionless
consultation of the entire existing body of our legal culture. Here
the primary impediment is mindless adherence to the antiquated
conception of "intellectual property," to whose well-deserved
destruction I shall return in a few minutes.
But these new media are not just inadequately implemented in the
existing technological and legal context. While they substantially
reduce the friction in scholarly communication, avoiding the need to
move people to data, they are not designed to solve the other primary
problem that has beset the scholarship of the past. Even given email,
netnews, automated catalogs and the virtual library--and assuming away
the ridiculous limitations on use posed by rules protecting the
non-productive middlemen called publishers--the scholar is still
engaged in using carbon-based intelligence to make static links among
existing sources, thus predetermining the obsolescence of her
enterprise in the face of future developments. We are still the
prisoners of outmoded data structures, and it is time to reconsider
the essence of what we do. As Albert Einstein said, our experience in
the 20th century is that everything has changed except the nature of
men's minds. Fortunately, what we do has become so altogether foolish
that it should not be difficult to change.
Nor have our students been alone in the ruination of our professional
literature. In your institution, as in mine, there are colleagues
whose primary metric of scholarly activity is pounds per year. They
think for a week, they write for a month, they publish a bloated and
hastily-considered version three months later in a law review
desperate for editorial material to justify 1600 pages per volume, and
a year later everyone has forgotten what they said, including
themselves. For such people, I believe, the printing press was a poor
invention. Publication in cuneiform, on baked clay tablets, would
have made the pounds per year ratio rise without a concomitant wastage
of the time and effort of those who feel socially compelled to read
all this baloney.
To the problem presented by the abysmal organization of our
professional literature, the new technology has evolved no solution to
offset its role as accessory before the fact. The finding aids
available on the network are only slightly better than those
previously available in photoreduced form; indeed, they are
essentially digital equivalents of the old indices. The fulltext
retrieval services devote gigabytes to the storage of law review
articles, but one hopes that before the wreckage reaches terabyte
levels someone will realize that there is no satisfaction in scrolling
online through a 150-page article with 800 footnotes by an apprentice
genius who has been told that 100 pages is insufficient for tenure.
It is not my present purpose to confront directly the problem of the
hypertrophy of theory in contemporary common-law scholarship. My more
limited point here is that the channels of professional communication
have been dangerously clogged, to the point at which, I believe, many
people have simply stopped reading the reviews altogether without
admitting it. The process of attempting to simplify and elucidate the
dilute materials of the law by publication of secondary scholarship in
the law review mode is no longer working. Sixty years after Fred
Rodell first bade farewell to law reviews it is time for us to rise up
in wrath and smite the Philistines who in the interest of
self-aggrandizement destroyed our literature. Let law reviews perish
forevermore!
But can the network provide an appropriate alternative for the
resuscitation of legal scholarship? The answer is most certainly yes.
The first step is the elimination of publication as presently
understood. Placing on the network a version of my work in a portable
page-description language (such as PostScript) allows anyone caring to
read my scholarship, whether online or in a permanent form, to receive
it with no loss in production values over the present system of
physical reproduction. The digital broadcast media like netnews and
the listservs, or their more usable successors, will then replace the
existing finding aids.
But we will do more by network publication than saving the costs of
law review publication and reversing the noxious effect of the
middlemen on the culture of scholarship. Network publication will for
the first time directly confront the static quality of all prior
scholarly data structures. Placing my work in the net means that I
can continuously revise and expand it. In addition, our cumbersome
citation mechanisms can be replaced by direct active links to other
materials on the net, so that the footnote--which is surely the bane
of legal scholarship--can be replaced by proliferated cross-linkages
of the kind primitively modeled in the current world by the citation
links of the commercial fulltext systems, and slightly more
sophisticatedly by the existing webform hypertext formats, such as the
World Wide Web. Such links can be created by machine control as well
as human intervention, so that case citations, legislative updates,
and other purely mechanical incorporations can occur without my having
to do more than make occasional editorial foray to prune back the
accretion of new links.
The webform systems also model for us, in a fairly simple way, the
unprecedented opportunities for collaborative work that the network
has created. Within the next generation we shall see the successors
of the webform hypertext systems facilitating collaborative projects
in the humanities on a scale previously only dreamed of. The
conception of the History Workshop or the Sixieme Section will be
revitalized, for example, along with kindred conceptions in many
disciplines.
For the common lawyers, too, limitations in place for centuries will
suddenly give way. The low quality of the common law's encyclopedic
sources, largely the consolidated output of headnote writers working
like Grub Street hacks for the booksellers, should be replaced by a
far richer literature, achieving the breadth of scale of the Romanist
tradition without its limited conceptual categories. Primary sources,
commentary, counter-commentary and scholarly debate should all be
joined in a single dynamic web, collaboratively edited. Our
contributions to this web will be much less bulky than our existing
screeds, reflecting the higher priority given to the making of links
over the self-assertive announcement of one's own brilliant
conceptualizations. But the result will be finally to concentrate the
activity of scholars where the need has always been: on the human
mind's unparalleled capacity to connect apparently disparate
materials. This is what carbon-based intelligence is for; the rest,
may I say, is silicon.
But the baneful influence of the dwarfs has by no means been
eliminated. The positive scholarly consequences of the digital
revolution are impeded in two directions, by technological design so
bad as to be ludicrous and lugubrious at once, and by the malevolent
consequences of an intellectual property system that bids fair to
outlive by lifetimes the system within which it originally functioned.
Let us begin with the technological difficulty. Pre-eminently the
problem can be phrased this way--the global software industry has
decided to reduce scholars to the effective mental level of morons,
and they are flocking to embrace the degradation with open arms.
Because we are the first generation of scholars to live in a world of
computers, our understandable fear of the technology is used against
us. The target is the most valuable possession of human
culture--language. Believing that any linguistically rich environment
for interaction between people and computers will be commercially
unpopular, the designers of operating systems want us to live in an
infant's world. They show you pretty pictues, and in order to
communicate you point at the appropriate picture and grunt.
A more perfectly ironic revenge of the second-rate it would be
impossible to imagine. A billionaire geek in Redmond, Washington
evens himself up with the university world, in which he was notably
unsuccessful, by reducing the world's intellectuals to the linguistic
level of Autralopithecus robustus, and is rewarded with the possession
of the notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci.
Much more is at stake than the fact that, like Sisyphus, you will
spend eternity rolling your trackball up hill. The shibboleth of
usability is beginning to make the technology of intellectual
liberation a prison of a particularly pernicious kind.
Let us take the simplest of our facilities: email. I have watched in
two different institutions in the past twelve months as faculty demand
for "fancy" email facilities militated for the adoption of
monstrosities that provide lots of pretty pictures, elaborate
twirlers, zillions of pull-down menus--in short, an environment made
for rodents. And it looks good too, to the faculty committee each of
whose members thinks he's had a busy day if he gets ten email
messages. But that's not the world of 1998, let alone the world of
2015. Increase the volume of email exponentially for a few years, as
happened at Columbia Law School when every student was given an email
account and the administrative business of the institution began to
migrate into the mailstream, and these programs are a deathtrap.
Pointing and grunting at a few messages is fine, but when your email
volume reaches 300 messages a day, as mine did several years ago, you
will run out of breath to grunt and time to point. Suddenly you will
start to wonder why all the vaunted intelligence of your computer
isn't performing linguistic analysis of your mail. Some should be
answered automatically, some should be filed for future reference
according to criteria of your own, some should be forwarded to more
appropriate recipients, etc. Oh, it can be done. I do it now. Try
sending me an email complaint about your grade on the Property exam
between the months of June and September and see what comes back. But
don't expect Billy the Buccaneer to do any serious thinking about it
before the Chicago version of Microsoft(R) Mail.
The linguistic content of computer interaction, like the dialogue
quality of Hollywood movies, is being debased at a rate whose
X-intercept seems only milliseconds away. I recently spent a day
helping a co-author edit an article that had been written using a
popular Windows(R) word processor. Rather than using the rich
symbolic environment of the keyboard to perform editing, the designer
has trapped the user on a rodent treadmill, in which every operation
requires two or three clicks and a lot more than one big drag. For
purposes of comparison, I wrote down all the revisions that it took
one hour to perform, and then compared the number of keystrokes
required to perform the same tasks using GNU Emacs, a freeware text
editor available at no cost to everyone on the planet thanks to the
dedication of one man--Richard Stallman. That hour of rodent movement
could have been reduced to ninety-six keystrokes, requiring
conservatively two minutes of operator time. A 3000% penalty in time
and frustration is too much to pay for all the pretty pictures.
The tools of scholarship have always required long educations to
master, and the network and its workstations are no different. Proper
use of a research library is a skill that takes years to acquire. A
distinguished Roman legal historian recently said to me "No Romanist
is ready to do really important work until he is fifty; it takes at
least that long to master the literature." What was not built in a
day cannot be understood overnight. Unless our computer environment
is linguistically rich, we will not be able to employ successfully the
pre-eminently linguistic tools of our trade. Instead, the quack
nostrums peddled to allay the disquiets of this transitional
generation are being passed along to our children, who we can only
hope will escape their influence. If scholarly work in the humanities
is to capture the benefits of the computer revolution, we must counter
the anti-linguistic bias in the present technology. My message is: If
you don't break the windows, you'll spend your life in a mousetrap.
The technical obstacles to the digital revolution in scholarship are
small compared to the oppressive deadweight of the intellectual
property system, a tripartite oxymoron like Voltaire's Holy Roman
Empire. Let us return for a moment to the webform hypertext systems
and network publishing, about which I was speaking a few minutes ago.
Who owns what part of this web of text, in which each item is
interspersed with links to hundreds or thousands of others? One of
the most important aspects of network publication is that it allows us
to rid ourselves forever of the leeches who have battened off the
intellectual substance of the Western world since Gutenberg.
Publishers were an artifact of the industrial period in the
information economy. The law of copyright is the coprolith that will
mark their passage in the fossil record. Yet one has only to read
last year's report of the Working Group on Intellectual Property of
the National Information Infrastructure Task Force to recognize how
profoundly we are caught in the mental trap of protecting the
publisher's right to profit from his purely industrial role in the
distribution of information, even as the industrial component of the
work we do is on the point of vanishing forever.
Even from my sickbed in Amsterdam I can hear the rumbling at this
point. Somewhere in the audience there is an econodwarf preparing to
explode. He is rocking back and forth in his chair, knotting his
pocket handkerchief, meditating his tantrum. "What," he is planning
to scream, "what about the incentive to produce? Who will make
scholarship if his property right is unprotected?" Find him now and
give him a peppermint, before he ruins the most important liberation
movement in human history. Not even Bill Gates is as tedious as the
econodwarf once the shouting begins. Not for an instant before
starting his nonsense about incentives does he consider that no one in
the United States receives significant direct remuneration from law
review publication, and that the indirect remunerations are sufficient
to produce far more blather than we absolutely need. Moreover not
even the econodwarf can believe, for example, that the West Publishing
Company only puts page numbers at the tops of the pages because the
Eighth Circuit says they can copyright the numbers. Indeed, the whole
discussion of incentives is a trap--the crushing weight of a dead
metaphor flattening our skulls. It's time for an alternate metaphor,
appropriate to the next epoch of human history. It began on the
afternoon when Faraday first noticed what happens when one wraps a
coil of wire around a magnet. Never again did we ask what incentive
there is for electrons to flow in the wire. So I offer you Moglen's
Corollary to Faraday's Law: "If you wrap the Internet around every
brain on the planet, knowledge flows in the network." That's
induction, and the only question is, what is the resistance of the
wire? Resistance, according to Moglen's Corollary to Ohm's Law, is
directly proportional to the field strength of the intellectual
property system. Neither of these corollaries is my property, and you
may copy them freely and without credit. I say, "resist the
resistance."
The foregoing concludes the anarchist portion of this talk. We now
return you to the regularly-scheduled transcendental nonsense brought
to you by Warner Communications and the Section on Copyright Law. But
first, a word from the future.
We will be a great deal closer to one another, as our experience with
the present primitive network media already shows. Our work will be
more tightly integrated, in ways I have already tried to describe, in
an environment in which the distinctions between research and
publication will have shifted significantly, and collaborative
enterprises on a previously unmanageable scale will be an important
part of most scholars' lives.
But in suggesting these properties of our future work in the
environment determined by new data structures, I should not want it to
be supposed that I also believe our brave new world will be one of
lessened individuality. On the contrary, the technology, when
properly applied, will allow us to join the cultivation of our minds
to the process of scholarly communication more seamlessly, and more
usefully, than ever before.
Let us consider, for a moment, that very primitive hypertext
starting-point, the personal home page. If you look at the home pages
now beginning to populate the network you will see lots of pictures of
peoples' dogs, hot lists, and some pointers to the future the size of
grass seed. But they will grow.
The home page is a very restricted example of the virtual personality,
a form of communication that has no analog in the world outside the
network, except that most precious and most endangered of
resources--conversation. Through our conversation with those who
share our deepest interests we learn not only about the experience and
information they have acquired in the course of their lives, but also
about the idiosyncratic, serendipitous, revelatory connections they
have made. The central, almost uncapturable beauty of human
intelligence is its fertility in unexpected juxtapositions. So much
of human intellectual progress arises from those epiphanies of life,
just as so much is lost by their frailty. The works of literature
that reveal the richness of the cultivated mind--the Essays of
Montaigne, Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, Robert Merton's On the
Shoulders of Giants, and in our own literature John Selden's Table
Talk--will never die. Yet their composition is a rarity, and their
form too, no matter how adventitious or Shandean in structure, is
fixed forever by the confinement of print.
Consider what our world would be if each of us--through a lifetime of
reading, study, and the making of gloriously improbable
connections--were leaving behind a work of this kind, not fixed in a
single version, but rather available for consultation down its myriad
of paths at any time, by anyone, for as long as the network endures.
The fruits of our reading, the winding track of our thoughts, our
speculations and uncertainties--a joinder at last in communicable form
between what we merely know and who we are. This is the agora in
which we shall sit, long past the day of our own demise, to form a
part of humanity's evolving mind.
Have I come so far from what we can presently do? Not really so far
at all, once the sources we consult, the notes we take, the course of
our correspondence and the body of our formal written work all begin
to converge within the linkage structure of the net. Others must
imagine what the effect will be for musicologists and composers,
philosophers and poets, sociologists and yes, even economists. Or
rather, these boundaries too will lose some significance, for the
cultivation of a learned personality is the search for wisdom, and the
wise are not contained within bailiwicks. At all events, I can only
feel, however distantly, the effects upon the scholarly literature I
most intimately love.
I hope that we shall all live long enough to populate that throng.
The steps that we take now, in the dawn of all our new instruments,
are very small. But we must travel the beginning of the road with our
goal in mind. If not we will be sold a bill of goods at starting by a
huckster who believes that his sales to multinational haberdashery
conglomerates indicate the proper design for tools to shape the future
of the human mind. Or else we will be indefinitely delayed while we
pay egregious tolls to those whose primary concern is the future of
syndication payments for Cheers reruns. The history of our century is
the history of the perversion of the media of communication for the
transmission of ever-larger volumes of bilge. Vigilance and
commitment are the price of permanent intellectual liberation. Thank
you.
Remarks of Professor Eben Moglen
AALS Mini-Workshop on the Internet and Legal Scholarship
New Orleans, Louisiana, January 5, 1995
The Law Professor as Pigeonhole Sorter
Scholars are prisoners of their data structures. This statement may
seem a trifle obscure, but I believe its content should be readily
recognizable. The organization of information determines what kinds
of learning are practicable given limited time and resources. In
addition, the prevailing systems of information organization give rise
to the social customs that define what kinds of scholarly activity are
appropriate and useful. Until the beginning of the digital
revolution, "data structures" meant primarily the physical
organization of written information. How data were preserved affected
what could be learned. For the authors of the book we call Bracton,
for example--working in the middle of the 13th century--information
about the laws and customs of England was contained--in dilute
sequential form--in the mass of the plea rolls, to which they had
preferential access. Scholarship, in that context, meant epitomizing
the plea rolls, to communicate to others in compressed form how their
contents did and did not reflect the more familiar conceptual
categories of the Romanized European law.
From the Primordial Slime to the Current Mess
One of the first achievements of the new information technology was to
destroy completely the utility of our professional publications. It
will not have escaped notice, I believe, that the number of law
reviews, the size of their issues and the length of the individual
contributions has increased in precise correlation to the spread of
the new technologies. Taken together the photocopier, the word
processor, cold type and desktop publishing have rendered the law
reviews an acrid heap of unreadable tripe. Unlike high-energy
particle physics, which conducts one of the most intellectually
sophisticated inquiries on the planet using four journals and an
abstract service, or even all of physics, which makes do with less
than one hundred major journals, American law professors alone believe
that their agglutinated sapience cannot be contained within less than
some six hundred separate publications. All but a small minority of
these lack any subject matter limitation, and all but an even smaller
minority are under the editorial direction of the least-educated part
of the legal culture, whose editorial interventions are largely
directed at making things longer by adding to each individual
publication lengthy elucidations of the evident. The scholar who
first said that the primary asset of the specialist was a firm grasp
on the obvious has no intellectual progeny among our student heros and
heroines of the law review circuit.
Breaking Windows: Let My People Go
But all is not skittles and beer. Everything I have said this
afternoon--save for my unmannerly pasquinades directed at the
dinosaurs of scholarship whose extinction I am vulgarly cheering
on--was first conceived almost thirty years ago by visionaries such as
Theodor Holm Nelson, whose forgotten work Literary Machines will be
seen in the next century as the first real description of the
revolution in human thought. My vision is only slightly improved over
that of the unrecognized giants on whose shoulders I have so far
stood. In the meantime the boxbuilders have started to catch up with
the visionary designers, and the dispersal of computing power onto
every flat surface on the planet continues apace.
Conclusion: the Virtuous Virtual Legal Scholar
So, what if we go home and break all the windows, insisting on
computers that participate fully in the crowning glory of human
culture--the making of language? What if we drive the moneychangers
from the temple, refusing to constrain our data structures and our
network within the boundaries prescribed by the subsidy for obsolete
industrial technology represented by the copyright system? What will
the world of our intellectual future be, that we should make so much
fuss about it?