by John Perry Barlow <bar...@eff.org>

Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and steel, I 
come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the future, I ask you 
of the past to leave us alone. You are not welcome among us. You have no 
sovereignty where we gather.

We have no elected government, nor are we likely to have one, so I address you 
with no greater authority than that with which liberty itself always speaks. I 
declare the global social space we are building to be naturally independent of 
the tyrannies you seek to impose on us. You have no moral right to rule us nor 
do you possess any methods of enforcement we have true reason to fear.

Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. You have 
neither solicited nor received ours. We did not invite you. You do not know us, 
nor do you know our world. Cyberspace does not lie within your borders. Do not 
think that you can build it, as though it were a public construction project. 
You cannot. It is an act of nature and it grows itself through our collective 
actions.

You have not engaged in our great and gathering conversation, nor did you 
create the wealth of our marketplaces. You do not know our culture, our ethics, 
or the unwritten codes that already provide our society more order than could 
be obtained by any of your impositions.

You claim there are problems among us that you need to solve. You use this 
claim as an excuse to invade our precincts. Many of these problems don't exist. 
Where there are real conflicts, where there are wrongs, we will identify them 
and address them by our means. We are forming our own Social Contract . This 
governance will arise according to the conditions of our world, not yours. Our 
world is different.

Cyberspace consists of transactions, relationships, and thought itself, arrayed 
like a standing wave in the web of our communications. Ours is a world that is 
both everywhere and nowhere, but it is not where bodies live.

We are creating a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice 
accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth.

We are creating a world where anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, 
no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or 
conformity.

Your legal concepts of property, expression, identity, movement, and context do 
not apply to us. They are all based on matter, and there is no matter here.

Our identities have no bodies, so, unlike you, we cannot obtain order by 
physical coercion. We believe that from ethics, enlightened self-interest, and 
the commonweal, our governance will emerge . Our identities may be distributed 
across many of your jurisdictions. The only law that all our constituent 
cultures would generally recognize is the Golden Rule. We hope we will be able 
to build our particular solutions on that basis. But we cannot accept the 
solutions you are attempting to impose.

In the United States, you have today created a law, the Telecommunications 
Reform Act, which repudiates your own Constitution and insults the dreams of 
Jefferson, Washington, Mill, Madison, DeToqueville, and Brandeis. These dreams 
must now be born anew in us.

You are terrified of your own children, since they are natives in a world where 
you will always be immigrants. Because you fear them, you entrust your 
bureaucracies with the parental responsibilities you are too cowardly to 
confront yourselves. In our world, all the sentiments and expressions of 
humanity, from the debasing to the angelic, are parts of a seamless whole, the 
global conversation of bits. We cannot separate the air that chokes from the 
air upon which wings beat.

In China, Germany, France, Russia, Singapore, Italy and the United States, you 
are trying to ward off the virus of liberty by erecting guard posts at the 
frontiers of Cyberspace. These may keep out the contagion for a small time, but 
they will not work in a world that will soon be blanketed in bit-bearing media.

Your increasingly obsolete information industries would perpetuate themselves 
by proposing laws, in America and elsewhere, that claim to own speech itself 
throughout the world. These laws would declare ideas to be another industrial 
product, no more noble than pig iron. In our world, whatever the human mind may 
create can be reproduced and distributed infinitely at no cost. The global 
conveyance of thought no longer requires your factories to accomplish.

These increasingly hostile and colonial measures place us in the same position 
as those previous lovers of freedom and self-determination who had to reject 
the authorities of distant, uninformed powers. We must declare our virtual 
selves immune to your sovereignty, even as we continue to consent to your rule 
over our bodies. We will spread ourselves across the Planet so that no one can 
arrest our thoughts.

We will create a civilization of the Mind in Cyberspace. May it be more humane 
and fair than the world your governments have made before.

Davos, Switzerland

February 8, 1996
_______________________________________________
Open
https://lists.partito-pirata.it/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/open

Rispondere a