Those who prefer broader intellectual property rights often deploy the rhetoric of physical property. By contrast, those who are concerned about maintaining public entitlements in information resist that rhetoric. In this Article, I take this dichotomy as a starting point for investigating the power of property rhetoric as a tool in public debate about the optimal scope of intellectual property rights. I first observe that this dichotomy is premised on a limited view of property as referring only nearly absolute private rights in owned objects. I then critique this prevailing assumption, showing that it fails to account for an alternative, social discourse of property that emphasizes both the limits on and communal aspects of ownership. Fin...