1485 points by schoen 2944 days ago | 126 comments on HN
| Moderate positive
Contested
Editorial · v3.7· 2026-02-28 10:36:41 0
Summary Free Expression & Digital Rights Champions
This memorial article celebrates John Perry Barlow, EFF founder, and his vision of the internet as a universal space for free expression, equal dignity, and freedom from coercion and totalitarianism. The content strongly engages Articles 1-2 (equality and non-discrimination), 18-19 (freedom of conscience and expression), and 30 (protection against rights erosion), while giving limited attention to procedural rights, economic/social rights, and discussion of corresponding duties. Overall, the editorial and structural framing directly champions core UDHR principles of universal human dignity and freedom.
Never heard of the guy until 2005 where CNET interviewed him about his interest in skype. Thus me and my friend downloaded Skype and called him. We chatted for five or ten minutes and he remained on my friends Skype since. Later found out he was in the Grateful Dead in same shape or form.
It's weird reading this because I very recently found out that a girl I went to high school with was his daughter. I had no idea back then (14+ years ago). This is a sad loss for the community and I'm sure his family as well.
Barlow's Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace [0] is one of the quintessential works that made the web the free place it is. What a great loss.
As a teenager, Barlow's writings inspired me and many others to do things such as paint our websites black to protest the Communications Decency Act, and write lots of actual letters which, in aggregate, effected change legally and socially.
In 2000 at Comdex, I remember Barlow saying that he had no love for the record companies - as a member of the Grateful Dead he had never received a royalty statement that didn't say he owed the company money. This was during the height of the war on MP3s when other artists were claiming they were being robbed at gunpoint or something.
"Cyberspace consists of transactions, relationships, and thought itself, arrayed like a standing wave in the web of our communications."
And:
"Your increasingly obsolete information industries would perpetuate themselves by proposing laws, in America and elsewhere, that claim to own speech itself throughout the world. These laws would declare ideas to be another industrial product, no more noble than pig iron. In our world, whatever the human mind may create can be reproduced and distributed infinitely at no cost. The global conveyance of thought no longer requires your factories to accomplish."
I've posted this on HN before, but his introduction to Birth of a Psychedelic Culture is highly worth reading. Among other things he talks about how (after entirely too much acid) he was planning on becoming America's first suicide bomber, to protest the Vietnam war, but got caught by his friends at the last minute:
I’d come to find myself in Portland. In the home of a stranger but there was no cause for alarm. This place felt like a home. It was real and a part of our collective universe. I never met my host, not once while I was there. She was a kindred spirit. Her home was warm and welcoming but I never knew her. On the last day of my trip, we managed to cross paths in the house, only in sound, never vision. She entered the shower, and I left to catch a plane to New York City. Like any other day.
In New York City, I found myself thinking of my time in Portland, feeling drawn to this woman. She sent me a friend request on Facebook. I immediately started rifling through pictures to try and see her. To understand what this feeling was. This draw. This pull. There was a picture with her and her father. I recognized the name but I didn’t know why. I immediately copied the name into google and was floored.
He was Cyberspace. A man who’s been with me my whole digital life. A dreamer. Someone who believes in more. Surreal clarity. A tangle of wires connecting this whole god damned universe caught us both and brought us together, for just that moment. I don’t know why the wires thought I was special, why I needed to know, but I’m happy they did.
I reflected on this moment. This connection that was both possible and impossible without this man and his daughter. Here’s to you JPB and Anna for being the conduit for these crazy electrical signals that had something to say. It was but a moment in passing in our collective universes, but one that left a mark.
That's truly unfortunate. I've admired his work on behalf of electronic freedom since the start and have gotten to meet the gentleman once or twice, as we graduated from the same high-school separated by a few decades.
My condolences to his family and friends, and thanks for sharing him with us.
I grew up in New Delhi in the late 90s on a steady diet of 2600, phrack, BBSes and the EFF/internet. Two of the people I'd read a lot about and was very inspired by were JPB and Mitch Kapor, as founders of the EFF - and I decided one day that I'd like to actually reach out and talk to Barlow (I didn't actually have a goal in mind, now that I think about it).
Figuring that an email would never get a reply, I added him on AIM. To my utter surprise, he added me back - and after introducing myself as a high schooler who was a fan of the work he was doing, we communicated over the next year or so on a wide variety of topics that included open source, free software and the state of the internet in India at the time. For the next 10 years or so, when AIM was still active, he was one of the very few people still on my contacts list who would go "online" and "offline" with a regular cadence -- one of the only reasons I ever even logged into AIM was to (rarely) say hello :).
Of course, I stopped using the service a long time ago, and lost touch with him - but his declaration of independence of cyberspace was something that I leaned on when researching about internet censorship and policies a few years ago. I never did reach back out to him, and there was no pressing need to either.
On hearing the news, I'm reminded of how prescient and applicable his words have been to the issues and challenges that we see in the internet of today - but also how he personally upheld one beautifully phrased paragraph in particular, by virtue of his accepting a request from, and interacting with a random high schooler from half way across the world.
Cyberspace consists of transactions, relationships, and thought itself, arrayed like a standing wave in the web of our commu
nications. Ours is a world that is both everywhere and nowhere, but it is not where bodies live.
> In 1996, Barlow was invited to speak about his work in cyberspace to a middle school classroom at North Shore Country Day School, which was a highly influential event in the early life of student Aaron Swartz, as Swartz's father Robert recalls Aaron coming home that day as a changed person.[23][24]
I never got to meet JPB, but I was lucky enough to attend his keynote at PyCon 2014 in Montreal. It's a great talk, should you have a spare 45 minutes.
He is (indirectly) responsible for the existence of a hackerspace in Fresno, CA. Last year a few of us got together to talk about starting a chapter of the Electronic Frontier Alliance. That conversation morphed into, "fuck it, let's just start a hackerspace."
I am a huge Grateful Dead fan (I don't call myself a dead head because I was 9 when Jerry died, I never saw them play.) But I always loved John Perry Barlow's songs. My old band used to cover The Music Never Stopped and Cassidy, and my all time favorite dead song is Throwing Stones.
I didn't even know he was a big influencer in tech until I saw him appear on the Colbert Report representing the EFF.
My JPB story is short and relatively meaningless, but back when I first signed up for twitter I just followed a bunch of famous people and would every now and then attempt to engage them. The only one that ever replied back to me was John Perry Barlow, and it made my week. I had interfaced with true greatness. Rest in peace, John!
I used to call him from time to time when I was a teenager, back in the early 1990s. He was always very open and neighborly and curious.
There are a number of sub-cultures that exist across the USA - redneck Wyoming ranchers, deadheads, San Francisco computer gearheads, civil libertarians - he seemed to belong to all of them. He was an easy person to say of that "he is one of the members of our community".
I know that him and Sean Parker were friends going way back. Someone told me a story that on the day Parker met Mark Zuckerberg etc. at the 66 restaurant, as portrayed in the movie the "Social Network", that Parker was crashing on Barlow's couch. I don't know if that is true or just part of the legend...
You would see him at various events around New York City when he was in the city. He often went to Florio's Pizzeria and Cigar Bar, holding court with people like Jaron Lanier and others.
A friend of mine said "He lived a life many would envy".
Such a loss. Who is the thought leader today to push back on the huge curtailment of online freedoms happening around the world. Even in the HN crowd, you see people succumbing to nationalism and making arguments to support their government's right to impose their court decisions on foreign jurisdictions in cyberspace. The problem isn't just the Great Firewall, it's stuff like Turkey or Thailand getting YouTube to take down a video criticizing their leader outside their region. It's European courts ruling their restrictions have to apply globally.
There's no leader really standing up and affirming the philosophical dream of the independence of cyberspace, as a place where people can gather freely to transact in virtual ways however they want. Rather, there's a huge backslide over the last 20 years.
The black-throated wind keeps on pouring in.
And it speaks of a life that passes like dew.
It's forced me to see that you've done better by me,
Better by me than I've done by you.
One thing that was clear from following him on Twitter was he had a big heart, and in particular was a doting father to his (I think three) daughters. They all seemed to be very free spirits.
I knew of him through that before I knew of him through his activism; if that's what you mean. Wasn't until a few years ago, when I followed him on Twitter, that I found out about his other work. He was a remarkable man.
Funny tidbit: for a short while I thought they were two distinct people, and I kept telling myself 'wow, what a coincidence that two people have such an unlikely name'.
Mike Godwin, who worked with Barlow at EFF back in the day, talked briefly about the Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace in a recent essay:
"Barlow, best known prior to his co-founding of the Electronic Frontier Foundation as a songwriter for the Grateful Dead, was writing to inspire activism, not to prescribe a new world order, and his goal was to be lyrical and aspirational, not legislative. Barlow wrote and published his “Declaration” in the short days and weeks after Congress passed, and President Clinton signed into law, a telecommunications bill that aimed, in part, to censor the internet. No serious person – and certainly not the Electronic Frontier Foundation and other organizations that successfully challenged the Communications Decency Act provisions of that bill – believed that cyberspace would be “automagically” independent of the terrestrial world and its governments. Barlow’s “Declaration” is best understood, as Wired described it two decades later, as a “rallying cry.” Similarly, nobody thinks “The Star-Spangled Banner” or “America the Beautiful” or “This Land Is Your Land” is a constitution. (And of course the original Declaration of Independence isn’t one either.)"
That was a great little corner of the universe to occupy. That was the first talk at the first conference to which Chelsea and I traveled. And also where my friendship with you began in earnest. Incredible.
Richard Stallman and Eben Moglen are who I take a lot of similar (but not the same) inspiration from these days. He's dead now too, and not a technologist, but I also took a lot of inspiration from the admonitions of freedom to read and freedom of speech from Christopher Hitchens.
I listened to this album for years and didn't understand that song until recently when I went back and listened again.
I don't think the song is about an agricultural town and a women fetching water as it first appears. I think it's symbolic. The women is dipping into the river of life and carrying a little part away with her. She is brown like the earth because in this case she is symbolic of the earth, i.e. the substrate on which life appears or develops. The drops of water in the reeds are individual instances of life, eventually they lose their individuality and return to the ocean. The plowman is sowing the earth. Etc. Etc.
So, someone else who thinks that sometimes they can see souls in the light of beings’ eyes.
At least I know I’m not the only crazy person. Sadly it is entirely unprovable to others. It would be like trying to prove to someone who’s never eaten chocolate before, that chocolate is this totally awesome thing. (And what is chocolate, really, but an entirely subjective sublime experience?)
Funny thing, though, that I can say about it (and which is entirely in agreement with his account)... If you ever manage to see theirs, they will be able to see yours, too.
Rest easy, JPB. You’re hopefully back with your tribe.
> There's no leader really standing up and affirming the philosophical dream of the independence of cyberspace, as a place where people can gather freely to transact in virtual ways however they want.
Among others, the 2600 crew are still carrying that torch.
Article directly quotes Barlow: 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity.' Explicitly protects freedom of thought and conscience.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article quotes Barlow's vision: 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs, no matter how singular, without fear of being coerced into silence or conformity'
Inferences
This directly protects freedom of thought, opinion, and conscience, and explicitly guards against coercion to abandon or hide sincere beliefs—core principles of Article 18
Central theme: Barlow enabled 'voices long silenced can find an audience' and 'anyone, anywhere may express.' This is explicit, comprehensive advocacy for global free expression and dissemination.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article states that Barlow's vision was that 'voices long silenced can find an audience' and 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs'
The memorial itself is published on EFF's blog with share buttons for distribution across Twitter, Mastodon, Facebook, and copy-link options
Inferences
These statements directly advocate for global freedom of expression and the right to disseminate information and ideas without state restriction
The structural practice of publishing and enabling distribution of Barlow's memorial demonstrates institutional commitment to exercising free expression
Article directly quotes Barlow: 'a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth.' Explicitly articulates equal inherent dignity.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article directly quotes Barlow's vision: 'a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth'
Inferences
This quote explicitly articulates that all humans possess equal dignity and rights regardless of social status, economic condition, or other immutable characteristics
Same Barlow quote explicitly enumerates non-discrimination on grounds of race, economic power, military force, and station of birth—directly addressing UDHR Article 2 protection categories.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article features Barlow's vision: 'without privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth'
Inferences
The explicit enumeration of protected characteristics (race, economic status, military background, birth status) directly mirrors UDHR Article 2's commitment to non-discrimination
Barlow's vision explicitly rejects privilege and prejudice based on race, economic power, military force, or station of birth—directly articulating equality before law and equal protection.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Barlow's quoted vision opposes 'privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth'
Inferences
This vision of equal treatment regardless of social characteristics directly embodies Article 7's commitment that all are equal before the law and entitled to equal protection without distinction
Article celebrates Barlow's vision of the internet as 'fundamental place of freedom' where 'voices long silenced can find an audience.' Directly advocates for universal human dignity and freedom from coercion.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Cindy Cohn describes Barlow as a 'visionary' whose vision was that the Internet should be 'a fundamental place of freedom' where 'voices long silenced can find an audience'
Article quotes Barlow: 'I knew it's also true that a good way to invent the future is to predict it. So I predicted Utopia, hoping to give Liberty a running start'
Inferences
The article frames Barlow's philosophy as inherently committed to universal human dignity and liberation from oppression
The conscious choice to emphasize liberty and positive vision aligns with the UDHR Preamble's aspirational commitment to freedom and justice for all
Article emphasizes Barlow's 27-year effort preventing 'turn-key totalitarianism' and protecting internet freedom against erosion. Core theme: defending rights against destruction. Commitment to continue.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
The article describes Barlow's concern with preventing 'turn-key totalitarianism' and his 27-year tenure at EFF defending internet freedom against surveillance and control
The article states 'we will continue the work to fulfill his dream,' indicating institutional commitment to preserving and expanding rights
Inferences
The focus on preventing totalitarian systems and preserving internet freedom represents a direct commitment to Article 30's principle that no right shall be destroyed or abrogated
Article emphasizes Barlow's vision enabling individuals to 'express his or her beliefs' and have their voice heard globally. Supports participation in cultural and artistic life.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article emphasizes Barlow's vision that individuals can 'express his or her beliefs' and have their 'voice' heard regardless of status or background
Inferences
The framing of the internet as enabling cultural and artistic expression for all participants aligns with Article 27's commitment to participation in the advancement of arts and culture
Article emphasizes internet freedom as enabling liberty and warns against 'turn-key totalitarianism.' Liberty is central to Barlow's vision; right to security is implied but not explicit.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article cites Barlow warning against 'turn-key totalitarianism,' indicating concern with systems designed to enable mass surveillance and state control
Inferences
Opposition to totalitarianism implies recognition that liberty and security of the person are endangered by surveillance and excessive state power
Article emphasizes that people can 'connect with others regardless of physical distance,' framing internet-enabled connection as freedom of association across geographic boundaries.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article emphasizes Barlow's vision that people can 'connect with others regardless of physical distance'
Inferences
This emphasis on distance-independent connection relates to freedom of association by suggesting that geographic separation should not prevent humans from forming groups and communities
Article frames internet as enabling democratic voice and political participation: 'voices long silenced can find an audience.' Implies right to participate in public discourse and governance.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article describes the internet through Barlow's vision as a place where 'voices long silenced can find an audience,' explicitly relating to political and civic voice
Inferences
The framing of the internet as empowering previously marginalized voices suggests a vision of democratized political participation and civic engagement beyond traditional state structures
Barlow's vision describes a borderless, universal internet community: 'a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice.' Implies commitment to international order respecting rights globally.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article quotes Barlow's vision of 'a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice accorded by race, economic power, military force, or station of birth'
Inferences
This vision of a borderless, universally accessible community implies commitment to an international social and political order that respects human rights across all jurisdictions and boundaries
Article's emphasis that 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs' implicitly recognizes personhood and agency of all humans regardless of social position.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article states Barlow's vision included 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs,' implicitly recognizing all individuals as autonomous agents deserving of voice
Inferences
Granting expression rights to 'anyone, anywhere' implicitly recognizes the personhood and inherent agency of all humans regardless of status or location
Article cites Barlow's warning against 'turn-key totalitarianism,' implicitly addressing the protection from arbitrary detention and mass surveillance control systems.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article describes Barlow as warning against 'turn-key totalitarianism,' a system designed to enable widespread surveillance and arbitrary state control
Inferences
The emphasis on preventing totalitarian infrastructure implies recognition of the threat to individual liberty and freedom from arbitrary state action
Article appears on EFF domain (privacy-protection organization founded by Barlow), but the article itself does not explicitly address privacy rights. Contextual domain alignment only.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
This article is published on the Electronic Frontier Foundation website, an organization founded by Barlow that is explicitly focused on privacy protection and surveillance resistance
Inferences
While this particular article does not directly discuss privacy, Barlow's founding role at EFF suggests alignment with privacy as a fundamental human right worth protecting
Article is freely accessible without paywall or registration. Content itself discusses internet's role in enabling access to information and voice—supporting educational right to information.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article is published freely without registration or paywall requirements, enabling universal access to information about Barlow's legacy
Inferences
Free access to information and the ability to broadcast knowledge without gatekeepers structurally supports the principle that education and cultural knowledge should be universally accessible
Article quotes vision that people can 'connect with others regardless of physical distance.' Frames digital connectivity as reducing barriers; related peripherally to freedom of movement.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article quotes that the internet enables people to 'connect with others regardless of physical distance'
Inferences
Virtual freedom to connect across distance tangentially relates to Article 13 by suggesting physical separation should not prevent human interaction, though the primary focus is communication not movement
Article focuses on civil/political rights (expression, freedom, dignity) without addressing economic and social rights (work, food, healthcare, social security). Coverage of Article 22 is absent.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
The article does not address economic rights, labor standards, welfare provisions, or social security
Inferences
The absence of economic and social rights content represents a significant gap relative to the UDHR's comprehensive approach spanning both civil/political and economic/social dimensions of human dignity
Article frames Barlow's mission as defending individual rights and freedom from coercion without explicitly discussing civic duties, community responsibilities, or balancing competing interests. One-sided rights emphasis.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
The article frames Barlow's mission as enabling individual expression and preventing coercion, without discussing corresponding civic responsibilities or community duties
Barlow is quoted deciding to 'focus on the latter'—enabling good uses—without discussing limits or duties to the broader community
Inferences
The one-sided emphasis on individual rights and expression, without corresponding framing of civic duties or responsibilities to the community, underrepresents Article 29's integrative approach to balancing freedom with community obligation
Domain mission centers on privacy protection. EFF maintains Privacy Badger and Surveillance Self-Defense tools. Strong track record of privacy advocacy.
Terms of Service
+0.05
Article 29
Standard TOS language; no significant human rights restrictions observed.
Identity & Mission
Mission
+0.28
Article 1 Article 19 Article 20
EFF explicitly champions free speech, privacy, and digital rights. Mission statement aligned with UDHR values.
Editorial Code
+0.12
Article 19
Editorial independence evident; no editorial policy discovered that undermines human rights discourse.
Ownership
+0.08
Article 19 Article 25
Nonprofit 501(c)(3) structure; no profit-driven ownership conflicts observed.
Access & Distribution
Access Model
+0.15
Article 19 Article 26
Content freely accessible; no paywall or access restrictions.
The blog post itself exemplifies free expression in practice. Share buttons and social links enable distribution. EFF maintains press releases, legal cases, whitepapers demonstrating active practice of free speech defense.
Freely accessible blog post with share buttons supporting global distribution. EFF platform designed to amplify marginalized voices and remove barriers to expression.
EFF operates as 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated to equal access and voice regardless of identity. Site structure supports universal participation without identity-based barriers.
EFF's mission and site design demonstrate commitment to equal treatment without discrimination. Privacy tools available equally to all users; content accessible regardless of demographic.
EFF blog platform and broader organization provide infrastructure enabling expression of unpopular or minority viewpoints without state coercion or suppression.
EFF provides freely accessible content without barriers. Donation ask is optional; core content available to all. Supports universal access to information.
Article emphasizes internet freedom as enabling liberty and warns against 'turn-key totalitarianism.' Liberty is central to Barlow's vision; right to security is implied but not explicit.
Article's emphasis that 'anyone, anywhere may express his or her beliefs' implicitly recognizes personhood and agency of all humans regardless of social position.
Barlow's vision explicitly rejects privilege and prejudice based on race, economic power, military force, or station of birth—directly articulating equality before law and equal protection.
Article cites Barlow's warning against 'turn-key totalitarianism,' implicitly addressing the protection from arbitrary detention and mass surveillance control systems.
Article quotes vision that people can 'connect with others regardless of physical distance.' Frames digital connectivity as reducing barriers; related peripherally to freedom of movement.
Article emphasizes that people can 'connect with others regardless of physical distance,' framing internet-enabled connection as freedom of association across geographic boundaries.
Article frames internet as enabling democratic voice and political participation: 'voices long silenced can find an audience.' Implies right to participate in public discourse and governance.
Article focuses on civil/political rights (expression, freedom, dignity) without addressing economic and social rights (work, food, healthcare, social security). Coverage of Article 22 is absent.
Article emphasizes Barlow's vision enabling individuals to 'express his or her beliefs' and have their voice heard globally. Supports participation in cultural and artistic life.
Barlow's vision describes a borderless, universal internet community: 'a world that all may enter without privilege or prejudice.' Implies commitment to international order respecting rights globally.
Article frames Barlow's mission as defending individual rights and freedom from coercion without explicitly discussing civic duties, community responsibilities, or balancing competing interests. One-sided rights emphasis.
Article emphasizes Barlow's 27-year effort preventing 'turn-key totalitarianism' and protecting internet freedom against erosion. Core theme: defending rights against destruction. Commitment to continue.
Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean. Learn more
build 1ad9551+j7zs · deployed 2026-03-02 09:09 UTC · evaluated 2026-03-02 10:41:39 UTC
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