RIP Aaron Swartz (1986-2013)
12
January, 2013
Aaron
Swartz
In
a country full of stupid laws – written by corrupt politicians,
refined by maniacal bureaucrats, and enforced by ruthless careerists
– few are stupider than the current version of the Computer Fraud
and Abuse Act. On the surface it seems sensible, first passed in 1986
as a basic legal protection against unauthorized access of federal or
major corporate computer systems the law has since expanded (with
particular help from the PATRIOT Act) into an amorphous blob of
contradictions that is only temporally congealed into a semblance of
rational jurisprudence to offer a pretext for selective prosecutions.
In short, the law has become a favorite club of the state to beat
political dissidents with and so it is that in enforcing this asinine
law a luminary of the internet has been hounded into an early grave.
Aaron
Swartz was an American success story. A talented kid he worked on
developing the RSS feed when he was 14. Swartz latter became – what
every sanctimonious politician of both parties proclaim is the
ultimate achievement – an entrepreneur, founding Infogami which
would later merge with reddit in 2006. In 2007 Swartz left reddit and
became a fellow at Harvard University’s Center for Ethics while
also founding Demand Progress a progressive activist group focused
primarily on online organizing. Perhaps Swartz’s most famous
activism was his role in helping to stop the Stop Online Piracy Act
(SOPA).
In
2011 Swartz was charged under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act with
wire fraud, computer fraud, unlawfully obtaining information from a
protected computer, and recklessly damaging a protected computer. The
crime? Downloading academic journals from not-for profit JSTOR on a
guest account without permission. JSTOR would later provide free
access claiming it already had a program in the works when Swartz
committed his crime. In other words, Aaron Swartz did to JSTOR what
Mark Zuckerberg did to Harvard’s Facebook – gained unauthorized
access to data which lead to offering a service the university said
it was already working on. And in the state of Massachusetts no less!
Like
Harvard with Zuckerberg, JSTOR was able to settle the issue with
Swartz outside of a court room. Unlike with Zuckerberg, the US
Attorney for Massachusetts pursued criminal charges which meant
Swartz faced up to 35 years in prison and a million dollar fine.
Maybe if Zuckerberg had been a political activist…
On
Friday January 11th Swartz was found dead in his apartment. The cause
of death is believed to be suicide, with a family member confirming
death by hanging. Quinn Norton, a close friend of Swartz, said of the
trial “it pushed him to exhaustion. It pushed him beyond.” Though
reports also note Swartz had a history of depression there is little
doubt that the added stress of a possible 35 years imprisonment and a
million dollar fine surely worsened any preexisting mental health
condition. Would you like to do 35 years in an American federal
prison?
So
here we are. A talented, passionate, and civic minded young man is
dead at 26, destroyed by state power. But instead of focusing on what
he lost, perhaps it is time to think about what we lost and what we
will lose if this behavior by the government continues. Do we have so
many people like Aaron Swartz to lose, to throw to the wolves of the
police state? And does such a meal even satiate those vile dogs or
does it merely wet their appetite? A key proponent of a free and open
internet has been destroyed by the grinding terror of the federal
government’s justice system. Not just a victim, but an example to
terrify other activists into silence.
Let
us hope those witnessing this story take lessons from the courage of
Swartz’s life of activism and not the tragic nature of his demise.
See comments by Glenn Greenwald -
See comments by Glenn Greenwald -

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.