Law in the Internet Society

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MatthewLadnerPaper1 25 - 24 Dec 2011 - Main.MatthewLadner
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Wikipedia: An Exercise in Anarchy?

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 I argue that notwithstanding its lack of property rights, Wikipedia has exclusionary features that result in exclusionary consequences mirroring those property rights produce. While this does not deny Wikipedia's qualitative superiority, it raises the question whether this superiority is attributable to truly "anarchic production." A fair critique is that it is improper to define "anarchy" one way and then test its existence by reference to some other quantity. But, a better definition of "anarchic production" takes into account some exclusion beyond that created by property rights. A narrower definition raises the possibility of "anarchic production" that is, incongruously, extremely exclusionary--for example, a system without property rights that excludes persons based on race would still be expected to produce inherently superior products. This is facially problematic.
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Though not all forms of exclusion are relevant to the analytic proposition, I propose that Wikipedia's exclusionary features do not violate the outer boundary of relevance because, like property rights, they exclude participants through the imposition of non-trivial costs.
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Though not all forms of exclusion must be relevant to the analytic proposition, I propose that the exclusionary features discussed herein do not violate the outer boundary of relevance--like property rights, they exclude participants through the imposition of non-trivial costs.
 From Resistance to Exclusion

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