back to articles 56. For example, we could adopt rules that make the "caching" of web pages presumptively permissible, absent an explicit agreement, rather than adopting the standard copyright doctrine to the contrary (Caching involves copying Web pages to a hard drive so that future trips to the site take less time to complete). Because making "cached" copies in computer memory is essential to speed up the operation of the Web, and because respecting express limits or retractions on any implied license allowing caching would clog up the free flow of information, we should adopt a rule favoring browsing. See Cyberspace Law Institute, Caching and Copyright Protections (Sept. 1, 1995), available at http://www.ll.georgetown.edu:80/lc/cli.html; Post, supra note 44b (proposing a newrule for caching Web pages); Samuelson, supra note 45b, at 26-27 (discussing copyright issues raised by file caching).