About this special issue of reason.

AuthorAlissi, Mike
PositionEditorial

AS EXPLAINED BY Editor-in-Chief Nick Gillespie on page 2, this is no ordinary issue of reason (see "Kiss Privacy Goodbye--and Good Riddance, Too"). It represents an unprecedented experiment in hyper-individualizing a commercial print publication. The overwhelming majority of subscribers has received a magazine in which the photo on the front cover, the information in the editor's note, and the advertisements on the back covers have been customized to individual readers. Out of a total print run of about 60,000, we've produced more than 40,000 unique editions of this issue to underscore some of the benefits of living in what our cover story calls a "Database Nation" (see page 26).

If you are reading a non-personalized version of the magazine, you likely picked up this issue at a newsstand or at an airport. (If you are a subscriber and you received a generic copy of the magazine, that's either because of data unavailability or other production problems that we weren't able to correct in time for the issue's print run.)

Aerial images were obtained from AirPhotoUSA (airphotousa.com). You can also visit terraserverusa.com to access free U.S. Geological Survey satellite images for any address in the United States. The demographic data on page 2 come from the U.S. Census Bureau (factfinder.census.gov), and the street map on that page is from Microsoft's MapPoint.

Our effort to process and collect data, print the covers, and assemble the issues has been a first-of-its-kind endeavor. In some cases, there may be problems with the output. For instance, the quality of the aerial photos depends heavily...

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