Part of the point I was making is that the new technologies commodify information and therefore tend to lock it up rather than disperse it. |
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Of course, by giving their work a physical component and creating objects that can be sold, Net artists have found a way to commodify their work. |
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All of these common heritage resources are under tremendous strain as corporations seek to privatize and commodify them. |
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There are economic incentives to commodify your tragedy, and that she did it is not surprising. |
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If we treat information as a proprietary good, we commodify information, and create ownership and control regimes. |
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Although we commodify nonhumans in the most extreme way by treating them as chattel property, we also commodify humans. |
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That Soulja Boy can commodify even Lil B's primal abstraction is a testament to his keen intuition. |
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I think the answer I wanted from you is that, yes, of course we don't want to commodify. |
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An excellent paper describing the exploitation and appropriation of Native American spirituality by individuals who commodify the sacred. |
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Any effort to aestheticize or commodify art is an attempt at censorship. |
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The concept of freedom is subverted here: freedom is not the development of human potential but the power to commodify oneself, ceasing to be a more developed human being. |
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While the knowledge society can provide increased access to diverse forms of knowledge, it also has the tendency to commodify goods and services for individuals. |
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One of these is the all-out effort to commodify and market that threatens to trinketize and trivialize the World War II experience. |
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The most frightening news is how corporations, with government support, are working to privatize and commodify water worldwide. |
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It is reinforced by customs that commodify young girls, she said adding, girls from poor households are more likely to be married as children. |
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Further, she asserts that surrogacy does not commodify children, but she presents no evidence for her assertion. |
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Often when the state intervenes to cope with some health-related problems, it is bound to act so as to further commodify health needs. |
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It is hard and hardly worthwhile to commodify a verbal style of expression alone. |
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How can a government that seeks to commodify workers claim any kind of moral or family values? |
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Boybands commodify and represent so many sweet, gentle tween notions. |
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Video's only weakness has been commercial, as a product hard to commodify. |
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For those who are watching today's debate, I would like to define why Canada must continue to protect our water as a natural resource and not commodify it as bulk water for export. |
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This includes challenging societies to address the many and varied ways they commodify children and the associated discrimination that does not view children as legitimate rights holders. |
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This serves to commodify the PC as a common and accessible tool that was fairly powerful and easy to use, aiding in the proliferation of such hardware in the homes and offices of malicious users. |
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The government seems absolutely intent on the notion that we should commercialize, commodify or treat as a commodity to be traded, bought and sold everything that is important to people in their daily lives. |
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We need regulations because we do not want to commodify human reproduction, and everybody would agree with that, but for heaven's sake, to criminalize a woman or a couple for engaging in this is absolutely unbelievable. |
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Some indigenous peoples philosophically object to market-based climate change policies on the grounds that they commodify interests in, for example, trees, undermining their cultural and spiritual value. |
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To commodify something that's essential in this culture is unacceptable. |
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