Aaron Swartz was something of a child prodigy, who took to computers at a very young age. At the age of 12, Swartz created a precursor to Wikipedia called Info Network and he also worked on the RSS blog summary system at the age of 14. His biggest success as a developer came when he co-founded the website reddit, which ended up being offered a million dollar buyout. Swartz would eventually become more politically-minded and he began to focus his efforts to freeing up supposedly public documents. This included Swartz acquiring more than 2 million public court records and his use of the MIT servers to mass download research papers from JSTOR, which is what ultimately got Swartz into major legal trouble. The tragic story of Aaron Swartz is that he is the latest example of an old world that is afraid of new technology. It is absurd to think that the US government would seek criminal prosecution, just because Swartz downloaded a bunch of files. The argument made by the prosecution in Swartz’s case is that “stealing is stealing,” whether a computer is used or a crowbar. However, there was no proof that Swartz was going to do anything illegal with the documents and he essentially found himself turned into a scapegoat, in the government’s larger fight against cyber terrorism. Many of the laws used to charge Swartz with came from the 1986 “Computer Fraud and Abuse Act,” which was a highly out-dated law drafted by paranoid politicians, in response to the 1983 film WarGames. Even though the charges eventually pushed Swartz to suicide, he did have at least one victory, when he helped put an end to the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act. In addition, Swartz’s tragic story is helping pave the way for updated computer laws. All together, The Internet’s Own Boy is a quite interesting and sad story about a man who had so much promise in the world of new technology, but ended up being a victim of the out-dated views of the old world. 9 | REALLY LIKED IT The Internet’s Own Boy opens today at the Bloor Hot Docs Cinema
The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz
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