John Perry Barlow
John Perry Barlow is a retired Wyoming cattle
rancher, a former lyricist for the Grateful
Dead, and cofounder of the Electronic
Frontier Foundation. Since May of 1998, he has been a Fellow
at Harvard Law School’s Berkman
Center for Internet and Society.
He was born in Sublette
County, Wyoming in 1947, was educated there in a one room
schoolhouse, and graduated from Wesleyan
University in Middletown, Connecticut with an honors degree
in comparative religion in 1969.
In 1971, John began operating the Bar
Cross Land and Livestock Company, a large cow-calf operation
in Cora, Wyoming where he grew up. He continued to do so until
he sold it in 1988.
He co-wrote songs with the Grateful Dead from 1971 until
their demise in 1995. He’s known them since they looked like this
In 1990 he and Mitchell
Kapor founded the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an organization
which promotes freedom of expression in digital media. He currently
serves as its Vice Chairman.
In 1990, John first applied William
Gibson’s science fiction term Cyberspace to the already-existing
global electronic social space now generally referred to by that
name. Until his naming it, it had not been considered any sort
of place.
John speaks, consults, writes for a living. He has written
for a wild diversity of publications, ranging from Communications
of the ACM to The New York Times
to Nerve.
He was on the masthead of Wired
for many years. His piece for Wired on the future of copyright,
The
Economy
of Ideas is now taught in many law schools. His manifesto,
A
Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace has been widely
distributed on the Net and can be found on more than 20,000 sites.
Partly as a consequence of that, he was called “the Thomas
Jefferson of Cyberspace” by Yahoo
Internet Life Magazine back when such cyber-hyperbole was fashionable.
He is a recognized commentator on information
economics,
digitized intellectual goods, cyber liberties, virtual community,
electronic cash, cryptography policy, privacy, and the social,
cultural, and legal conditions forming in Cyberspace. He also
works as a consultant on such matters with the Vanguard
Group, DiamondCluster
Exchange, and the Global Business
Network. He is also a member of the External
Advisory Council of the National
Computational Science Alliance.
In recent years, John has devoted much of his time and energy
helping to “wire” the Southern Hemisphere to the North
and has traveled extensively in Africa. His Wired piece, Africa
Rising describes the first of these journeys.
More recently, he has been working with Brazil’s Minister of Culture,
Gilberto Gil,
in an effort
to get all of Brazil’s music online.
In June of 1999, FutureBanker
Magazine (an ABA Publication) named him “One of the 25
Most Influential People in Financial Services”, even though
he isn’t in financial services.
Finally, John recognizes that there is a difference between
information and experience and he vastly prefers the
latter.
John is the father of three daughters, Leah
Justine, 21, Anna
Winter, 19, and Amelia,
17. When not away at school or traveling with him — which they
often do — they live in Wyoming with their mother, Elaine Parker
Barlow, to whom he was married for 17 years before they separated
in 1992.
He lives in Pinedale, Wyoming (75 miles from the nearest
stoplight or franchise), New York’s Chinatown, San Francisco, Salt Lake
City, On
The Road, and in Cyberspace.
He is still mourning the death
of Dr. Cynthia Horner.
Read
John Perry Barlow 2.0:
The Thomas Jefferson of cyberspace reinvents his body — and his
politics,
Cognitive Dissident,
Newsmaker: Trouble ahead, trouble behind,
The Debate Over Internet Governance:
A Snapshot in the Year 2000, and
Notable Speeches of the Information Age, John Perry Barlow.
Watch
John Perry Barlow/Jack Valenti at Creative Commons launch,
PBS NOW: Interview with John Perry Barlow, and
John Perry Barlow – European Graduate School – 2006.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.