Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Internet whiz, Politics kid - the outstanding legacy of Aaron Swartz

Aaron Swartz, prodigious as Steve Jobs, technologically gifted as Bill Gates, strategic as any top-level CEO. Yet how many of you have heard his name, and know about his enormous contributions to the way we experience the internet today?

Until last week, when I watched the film "The Internet's Own Boy," a film cataloguing Swartz' massive technological and political contributions to the world today, I knew nothing about Swartz's widely forgotten life-story. 

But Swartz's story and message are something we all should know.

Swartz grew up in Hyde Park, Illinois (our very own Chicago boy!). Starting at a young age, he was a gifted programmer. At age fourteen, he helped develop the RSS software which allows internet users to compile web-page summaries for easier and quicker reading. By fifteen, he had contributed to the code for the Creative Commons which offers a less stringent alternative to standard copyright licenses. Graduating from high-school early, at nineteen, he worked on the development of Reddit and enrolled at Stanford for a year before being recruited by a major Silicon valley tech corporation, Wired. He worked there for a short time, already a millionaire in his early 20s, but he found the corporate world stifling despite its material benefits, and he quickly got himself fired from his Silicon Valley job by not showing up to work for weeks at a time. 

Seeking a new challenge, Swartz entered the world of politics. Swartz had begun questioning the existing power-structures, their inefficiencies and corruption, from a very young age, and now that he had the technical know-how and the resume to effect change, he threw himself into campaigns for freer access to information.

Among other things, Swartz wanted to make the fruits of academic research available to the masses, instead of locked-away in expensive databases where only subscribing individuals could read and benefit from them. He wrote about his beliefs with other like-minded individuals in the Guerilla Open Access Manifesto

Swartz decided to target a major Academic Journal provider, JSTOR, by piggy-backing on MIT's subscription to the service to download a massive numbers of articles from the database onto external hard-drives. No one is certain what he intended to do with the articles he downloaded. Even still, it was at this point that Swartz began to face legal push-back for his egalitarian mindset. 


For breaking into JSTOR’s database, Swartz faced 13 felony counts. This legal pressure ultimately broke him, but not before he successfully organized a social and political movement stopping SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) from passing in 2011, which would have allowed the government to immediately shut-down any website that posted any copyrighted material without adequate permission, whether it was intentional or not.

Swartz hanged himself in 2013 at the age of 26, before he ever went to trial for the JSTOR breach.

In accounts of Swartz and his life, we not only glimpse into Swartz' incredible contributions to the tech world, and creative use of programming to combat inequality, but we see into his personality, his motivation, the personal qualities that allowed him to achieve what he did, as well as the Achilles' heels he suffered that lead to his demise. In his story, we hear echo many of the characteristics of creatives we have been learning about this semester. 

Swartz’ personality was complex to say the least. His girlfriend Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman describes his neurotic fear of being talked about. Friends and family reflect how seemingly normal his behavior was prior to killing himself. His father remembers: “There were times when Aaron would- where he would, all of a sudden, not be himself, for a short period of time.” Just as Csikzsentmihalyi describes in “The Creative Personality,”contradictory traits certainly coexisted in Swartz.



His motivation, too, was intrinsic as much as extrinsic. Not interested in money, his motivations were humanitarian and far-reaching. 

And collaboration, in the broadest sense, in the open-source world of the internet was his passion and what he fought for his whole life.

Aaron wielded his technical genius in creative and impactful ways that have forever shaped our experience of the internet. In light of the current threats to internet equality that the net-neutrality proposal brings, we should all look to courageous and creative figures like Swartz to find new and equally creative ways to fight back.


https://archive.org/stream/GuerillaOpenAccessManifesto/Goamjuly2008_djvu.txt







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