“…More recently, notions of information as a commodity in the nineteenth century have also been addressed, most particularly in terms of news, explained by the growth of the popular press and emergence of agencies such as Reuters (Boyce, Curran, & Wingate, 1978;Boyd-Barrett, 1978;Ohmann, 1996;Read, 1992;Storey, 1969;Weller & Bawden, 2005, 2006. Some information scholars have suggested that information also began to emerge as a cultural commodity (Weller, 2008(Weller, , 2009). The role of puffery, advertising, and promotion within etiquette books, and the way in which this type of information began to be dispersed alongside behavioral maxims, can be seen as an example of what Richards (1991, pp.…”