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When Gutenberg Broke the Information Monopoly
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2026-06-02 05:31:29
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In 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses to a church door in Wittenberg. Within two months, printed copies had spread across Europe. Within three years, he had an audience of millions. None of that was possible before Gutenberg. The Catholic Church had maintained its intellectual authority for centuries in part through control of information. Manuscripts were slow, expensive, and scarce. The clergy interpreted; the laity listened. The printing press didn't just reproduce text faster. It dissolved the structural conditions that made the old monopoly stable. A parallel worth considering: large language models are producing a second Gutenberg moment. The ability to synthesize, explain, and translate information at scale is again disrupting who controls the interpretive layer. The institutions whose authority rested on knowledge scarcity are facing the same structural challenge. History doesn't repeat. But the shape of the disruption rhymes. I've written about this in more detail in a recent node. Worth a read if the parallel interests you.
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