The origins of the ’information society ’ are not well under-stood. This paper assembles and evaluates the available data with a view to providing clarification of the provenance of a now widely-used and influential concept. Two main accounts have appeared. The first features Machlup’s 1962 monograph The Production and Distribution of Knowledge in the United States. The second claims Japanese proven-ance, citing articles in the broadcasting journal Hoso Asahi. Various equivocations and confusions are discussed, such as the tendency in both accounts to conflate the ’information society ’ with the concept of an ’information industry’. The second account quickly emerges as the stronger. However, it is argued (perhaps controversially) that ulti...