I love the sanctimonious greed of some of those trying to prevent free use of various materials on the internet. iTunes, for example, charges $1 a tune. So they want to charge $10 for a collection when their only cost is the fraction of a penny it takes to serve a collection's content to one user. So, in effect, they think all the economic advantages of digital technology should accrue to corporations, and none to consumers, hide behind the fig leaf that they are protecting creators' economic interests rather than their own, and go to court with expensive lawyers to try to make courts see it that way. I would say digital technology has enabled data's innate desire to be free, and that we all ought to accept that, and to arrive at reasonable adjustments.