In 1996, John Perry Barlow wrote “A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace.” At the time, it was exciting and liberating for those of us who were paying attention. In retrospect, it was naive and premature.
Barlow has been an important figure in the development of the online world — both as a coder and as a founding member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation — but some people know him best as a lyricist for the Grateful Dead. (You might also remember a story I wrote last year about his “love at first sight” relationship with a psychiatrist.)
Barlow’s declaration of independence for the online world is pretty libertarian in nature. (He’s frequently described as a “cyberlibertarian.”) It’s about the efforts of governments to control people and about how they’ve failed, so those in cyberspace were moving on to a world without elected governments. It’s about how those of us in the online world are building a new world beyond the control of governments.
The problem is that it’s turned out to be far easier for governments to control cyberspace than Barlow and Co. imagined 17 years ago. In fact, governments are encroaching more and more on what used to be a wide open frontier — and they’re imposing the rules and control of their world on cyberspace.

I don’t know how to amuse you into taking your future seriously
Do we choose to be free people? Or will we live as slaves to mobs?
To think clearly, turn off the tube: Your television is not your friend
What if biggest risk to our lives comes from our own unhappiness?
I don’t regret my choices, but I do lament choices he refused to make
My utopia’s different from your utopia — and that’s just fine
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it
Pinning big hopes on Mitt Romney? He’s a hypocrite on ObamaCare
I’m terribly sorry to break it to you, but straw polls mean nothing