We see the influence of the information age ever ywhere, except in the GDP statistics. More people than ever are using Wikipedia, Facebook, Craigslist, Pandora, Hulu and Google. Thousands of new information goods and services are introduced each year. Yet, according to the official GDP statistics, the information sector (software, publishing, motion picture and sound recording, broadcasting, telecom, and information and data processing services) is about the same share of the economy as it was 25 years ago - about 4%. How is this possible? Don’t we have access to more information than ever before? The answer isn’t about quantity, it’s about price. The bits that comprise today’s information goods are supplanting the atoms that formed yesterd...
abstract (introduction): the seventies launched a development which, no doubt, will affect the socia...
This paper measures the size and structure of the U.S. information economy in 1992 and compares them...
Converging technologies have changed the way we should look at information.Traditional paradigms o...
We see the influence of the information age ever ywhere, except in the GDP statistics. More people t...
The Internet has dramatically changed the way we conduct business and our daily lives by provided us...
As revealed by Tapscott in his best-seller The Digital Economy published in 1994, the Internet has d...
Online search engines, social media platforms, and targeted advertising services often employ a “dat...
Government is one of the biggest producers of data—and one of the few that deliver data to the publi...
It is more important now than ever to come to grips with the limitations of GDP as a measure of well...
As GDP is a measure of market capacity and not economic well-being, this report has been commissione...
Information, as much as money, is the grease on which the wagon wheels of a society turn. While econ...
Complex ecological and social systems depend upon people exploiting the key resource of information....
The Internet has dramatically changed the way we conduct business and our daily lives by provided us...
“Free ” consumer entertainment and information from the Internet, largely supported by advertising r...
{Excerpt} Information has become ubiquitous because producing, manipulating, and disseminating it is...
abstract (introduction): the seventies launched a development which, no doubt, will affect the socia...
This paper measures the size and structure of the U.S. information economy in 1992 and compares them...
Converging technologies have changed the way we should look at information.Traditional paradigms o...
We see the influence of the information age ever ywhere, except in the GDP statistics. More people t...
The Internet has dramatically changed the way we conduct business and our daily lives by provided us...
As revealed by Tapscott in his best-seller The Digital Economy published in 1994, the Internet has d...
Online search engines, social media platforms, and targeted advertising services often employ a “dat...
Government is one of the biggest producers of data—and one of the few that deliver data to the publi...
It is more important now than ever to come to grips with the limitations of GDP as a measure of well...
As GDP is a measure of market capacity and not economic well-being, this report has been commissione...
Information, as much as money, is the grease on which the wagon wheels of a society turn. While econ...
Complex ecological and social systems depend upon people exploiting the key resource of information....
The Internet has dramatically changed the way we conduct business and our daily lives by provided us...
“Free ” consumer entertainment and information from the Internet, largely supported by advertising r...
{Excerpt} Information has become ubiquitous because producing, manipulating, and disseminating it is...
abstract (introduction): the seventies launched a development which, no doubt, will affect the socia...
This paper measures the size and structure of the U.S. information economy in 1992 and compares them...
Converging technologies have changed the way we should look at information.Traditional paradigms o...