(no title)
0xABADC0DA | 13 years ago
I don't get this at all... Harvard fellow uses MIT's network surreptitiously to violate the terms of service to download a nonprofit's entire database and then give it away for free, putting them out of business. Gets busted and charged with crimes. Where's the problem here?
Ok the prosecutor may have been overzealous, but we do have an adversarial system and it was Swartz's bad decisions that brought the hammer down. They didn't plant drugs on him. He wasn't doing it to feed his family. Sorry to all the people here that knew him personally, and to whom this is a personal tragedy, but this is not the kind of travesty of justice that you are making it out to be.
Wintamute|13 years ago
Whether the gate-keeper is nonprofit or not isn't really important. In point of fact, the entire system of journals charging fees for access to academic papers is outdated and broken, and is merely a parasitic relic from an age where it cost large sums of money to print and distribute paper-based media. Remember that universities pay a fee to access journals, and sometimes even pay a fee to have their papers published in journals, all the while generating and peer reviewing the content at their own expense.
In other words we can do better. And we should do better. By releasing JSTOR's content publicly Aaron was engaging in activism for the common good. You're welcome to your opinion that he deserved the book throwing at him and a $1M legal bill, but (in my opinion) you should think again.
unknown|13 years ago
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jeffdavis|13 years ago
* Why is this a Federal crime at all? Because some computer in another state was involved? If so,then soon all crimes will be federal.
* It appears they used mostly catch-all laws. The vague wording is subject to confirmation bias where almost any action looks like a violation. This is a particular problem with laws related to computer use; but also includes laws like "obstruction of justice" and "lying to a federal agent".
* In order to have a "reasonable" sentence on the table at all, he has to give up his right to a trial.
* As far as I can tell, no damage was actually done to anyone yet.
* Since when is violating a TOS a criminal issue? Did we outsource the writing of laws to company legal teams?
toyg|13 years ago
emkemp|13 years ago
[1] http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB1000142412788732458150...
And "checking out too many books at once" = allegedly hacking into a third party network to download 4 million articles from 1,000 academic journals without paying the required fees.
aes256|13 years ago
hobbyhacker|13 years ago
Do you notice the contradiction in 'non profit' and 'putting them out of business'?
danso|13 years ago
unknown|13 years ago
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