Content. The private sector will not open itself to control or regulation by the intelligence community, nor will it
cooperate with any initiative, which seeks to impose government oversight upon private sector expertise and data. It will, however, welcome government subsidization of the marginal cost of providing increased public access to its expertise, in the same fashion that the National Science
Foundation (NSF) nurtures selected scientific & technical initiatives. A
National Knowledge Foundation (NKF), funded with just $1 billion a year by which to nurture distributed centers of subject-matter expertise which permit increased public access to their knowledge, could yield enormous productivity gains in both the private and public sectors. International agreements to implement a Global
Information Management (GIM) burden-sharing agreement could radically reduce the cost of information for Third
World and other policymakers, and begin the process of creating an "information commons" which can support virtual diplomacy.
Coordination. There is an urgent need for voluntary coordination in the arena of standards, of content acquisition and development, and of resource management. Billions of dollars a year are being wasted
in the United States alone, simply for lack of coordination across industrial sectors and organizations.
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