 Nick Bramble, I'm a law student here. I think the future of the internet comes down to conflicting forces. Like, you had market forces, market production on one hand, which is made possible by a company like Google, which creates advertising tools that let amateur bloggers make money off the stuff that they create. And there would be a conflict between market forces and non-market forces, places like Harvard, places like things funded by the government that allow sort of a patronage regime to emerge, where people are creating things not in response to market forces, but in response to mandates of government, or in response to university mandates, or in response to broad articulations of the public interests, such as what Berkman is doing. So I think in the future you will see this battle drawn out between these two forces. And you'll see each side incorporate one another as they design tools and content on the open internet. I'm not sure who's going to win, exactly, but I do think that that will be the major structure of the battle. Patronage regimes, public-funded regimes, versus market regimes, that's all.