Zeno makes some valid points about establishing classics in a genre, but I'm not sure that is something to be aspired to in noise. A critical ear or eye is important of course, but when pinnacles, masterpieces or canons are established, it often marks the death knell of a body of work. Just like major record labels releasing Best Of compilations to fulfill an artist's contract, or retrospective exhibitions being organised by art galleries to mark the legacy of an artist that has seemingly reached their prime. It's good that discussions like this are being raised that something IS still missing in noise, as it implies that work is still yet to be done and territories are still to be explored, even if right now we might be examining this from a nostalgic standpoint. Nostaglia, of course, used to be considered an illness...
Novelty is crucial, and it's likely what got us all interested in noise in the first place. Be it from reading about notorious Hanatarash shows of the past... picking up a NON 7 inch with multiple spindle holes and locked grooves... trying to avoid having to get a tetanus jab from handling a noise release covered in rust, razor blades, or barbed or mesh wire... receiving a mail order package that comes with a handwritten letter/postcard, bizarre xeroxed fliers or even having everything packaged up in torn pages from a local newspaper in the sender's native language... the list goes on and we can all name examples, be they small or large, experienced or apocryphal. But the internet (which we've seemingly all defined as the culprit to blame) has dulled the impact that all this has. Remember the "PayPal'd" meme of the Troniks forum? What a curse that turned out to be in the end. All you need to do is add something to the Shopping Cart and that's it. Doesn't arrive? Bitch and complain about it online, and keep feeding the beast. And we don't even have to wait for the thing to arrive now in this digital age. It's just another folder on your hard drive with a square thumbnail, like every other album/download/rip/file you have. Not very noise if you ask me.
The commercial/economic point that Mikko raises is one contentious facet of noise, but again to ask another parallel question, what about the ecology of noise? Which again, Zeno and others hint at. What effect is the way you cultivate, organise, hunt, farm or destroy noise playing on your self and the larger environment in the short term and longer term? Is digital more of a burden than physical? Is a collection best appreciated when listened to until worn out, or played once/never before being shelved indefinitely? Aren't all vinyl releases ultimately limited editions? Will download cards go the way of the spraypainted CDr? What will replace tinnitus as an inevitable byproduct of noise for generations to come?
... sorry, I lost track of myself there.