I think that this INTERNET directory business points up the fragility of this whole "free" and unstructured communication that we have come to take for granted on the INTERNET. My sense is that the Internet is an anomaly in this culture; its non-commercial nature and its open-endedness makes it particularly valuable. When things like this directory, or my faux-pas of asking Bob Dahl for his CV on the list rather than privately, come up, it draws attention to the delicacy of the Internet. As is the case with the first amendment , there are kind of Internet absolutists who see any infringement (ie commercialization) as the narrow edge of the wedge. Then there are those who are more laissez-faire, assuming that this free-wheeling mode of exchange can't be seriously challenged. We all expect courtesy and the following of some unspoken and unidentified rules in our Internet exchanges. We all see that courtesy and the social contract is being eroded in all aspects of public life. It is sobering to think how easily a few wrong steps could erode the quality of communication that we all value in this community. That is my sense of the "subtext" motivations of people who are threatened by infringing commercialization or discourtesy of taking names without approval. Eric Siegel [log in to unmask]