It's
a truly open marketplace of ideas, with no editors, gatekeepers, or quality control.
In doing so, I have suggested that without
a truly open marketplace of ideas, without a mass media environment in which all sides of issues are freely and openly discussed, we can not have a workable democracy.
Not exact matches
But Congress ran into a problem: If an even, competitive playing field depended on regulation, the
marketplace wasn't
truly open or free.
There's a cost for them to ingest, manage and lend even free books (Adobe charges libraries for each lend, even of free books), so they're unlikely to want free books that aren't going to get read (there's a need in the
marketplace for a free
open source DRM checkout system that libraries can use, but that's a matter for another time, and some entrepreneur other than yours
truly).
Boston's the Muse and
Marketplace is ready for some «serious noticing,» itself, by a widening body of writers who need the compassionate craft - based reassurance that, yes,
opening the window on that
marketplace is
truly necessary now.