The Washington Post, July 7th, 1996
The Internet, to read its press notices, is finally flowering with what the moguls call "content." The Web is bursting with stuff: information, lists, indexes and the random family detritus of people's home pages. Even now, though, one aspect of the growth of "content" seems to elude those who browse and graze. Information, as this product used to be called, isn't some natural resource that grows by itself. Useful information -- whether it's historical archives, statistical databases or the written record in general -- turns up only when some human being sits down and produces it in defiance o...
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