Wednesday, January 30, 2013

"99%" Imbedded in Discourse #AaronSwarts


Aaron's Army
Memorial for Aaron Swartz at the Internet Archive 
January 24, 2013
(link)
"Sequestering knowledge behind pay walls—making scientific journals only available to a few kids fortunate enough to be at fancy universities and charging $20 an article for the remaining 99% of us—was a festering wound. It offended many people."


"When the U.S. Attorney told Aaron he had to plead guilty to 13 felonies for attempting to propagate knowledge before she'd even consider a deal, that was an abuse of power, a misuse of the criminal justice system, a crime against justice.

And that U.S. Attorney does not act alone. She is part of a posse intent on protecting property not people. All over the United States, those without access to means don't have access to justice and face these abuses of power every day."

"It was a crime against learning when a nonprofit corporation like JSTOR, charged with advancing knowledge, turned a download that caused no harm and no damage into a $92 million federal case.

And the JSTOR corporate monopoly on knowledge is not alone. All over the United States, corporations have staked their fences on the fields of education: for-profit colleges that steal from our veterans, nonprofit standards bodies that ration public safety codes while paying million dollar salaries, and multinational conglomerates that measure the worth of scientific papers and legal materials by their gross margins."


"Aaron Swartz was not a criminal, he was a citizen, and he was a brave soldier in a war which continues today, a war in which corrupt and venal profiteers try to steal and hoard and starve our public domain for their own private gain."

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