Wow. Oh, wow. The gauntlet has been thrown down.
Category Archives: libraries
Inquiry into Swartz case
Two members of Congress have asked what reasons the DOJ had for so zealously going after Aaron Swartz. (Be sure to click on the link to Wired). I hope this isn’t just a we’ll pretend to be interested in fairness and justice...
I checked at Marcy Wheeler’s site, but nothing up about this.
Aaron Swartz
I found this interesting post on Aaron Swartz, which raises more questions than it answers…
I found another post on this site Saturday, but couldn’t find it again looking today. It mentioned a post by Marcy Wheeler on what was going on with Aaron Swartz and his suicide after being hounded by authorities. (Be sure to click on the NY Times link, which explains a little better.) More here.
This chills one to the bone. And what exactly was he downloading that caused such concern? The articles dance around it. Anyway, Aaron Swartz believed that the information out there that was paid for by taxpayers deserved to be easily accessed–that is, without paying high $$ to join JSTOR or any other program to gain access. It was noted that many documents are being electronically copied with limited access to the public. This is incredibly disturbing, as everyone knows that Information is Power. And knowledge can inform the American citizen what their government is doing. (This is why stuff like Kindle worry me–taking information off of physical books and putting them in electronic gadgets that require a battery and software to view is dangerous in that if either of those fail to work, the information is inaccessible. One can easily see how this can turn into denial of information–book burning a la the information age.)
The thing is…Swartz had legal access to the information, via Harvard! He had the legal right to access. He was trying to make a point that the copyright laws protected electronic information that the taxpayers paid for, but were denied access to. Now, think of the library books one checks out…they are copyrighted materials, but one can still access the information via a library card. I think Swartz was applying those same principles to his providing this information. Note that JSTOR refused to prosecute him once they learned he had legal access.