This story appeared
on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2013/011813-bradner.html
The
end of an extraordinary life: Aaron Swartz
'Net Insider By
Scott Bradner, Network World
January 18, 2013 04:47 PM ET
Network World - I had already submitted
my last column when I heard about Aaron
Swartz's death. Some might say that it's too late to comment on this story
since the crowd has moved on, but it's never too late to write about someone
you knew.
I did not know Aaron well: I spent a
few days at a retreat he also attended about five years ago, but I knew his
work. He was everything that all the coverage you have already read mentions --
extraordinarily smart, nice and dedicated to making the right things happen.
As chance would have it, I also know
one of the prosecutors in the case, Stephen Heymann,
about as well -- having talked with him about the same amount of time. In some
ways, Heymann and Swartz are not all that different
-- both are (or were) smart and dedicated to their view of "right."
Much vitriol
has been unleashed on the prosecutors' office in this case. At this point I
do not think that any of the people not directly involved know enough of what
happened in detail but, as many have said, including U.S. Attorney Carmen
Ortiz, the actual charges Aaron was facing were widely out of proportion with
what he had done. Even the widely reported six-month sentence being offered as
part of a plea deal is far too high a price to pay for attempting to make a
pile of scholarly articles freely available.
Maybe it was a refusal on the part of
MIT to accept a lesser penalty, as has been reported, that kept Ortiz and Heymann from agreeing to a penalty more in line with what Aaron
actually did. We should know at some point because MIT, to its credit, appointed
Professor Hal Abelson, perhaps the one MIT person that could be trusted to
fully tell MIT and the rest of us the truth, to investigate the school's
actions.
I am sad, very sad. Aaron was a good
guy, a very good guy. He made the Internet, and thus the world, a better place
by what he did -- starting when he was barely a teen. He accomplished more in
his 26 years than almost any other fighter for the right that I can think of
has done in twice as many years. Aaron was four years younger than the Internet
(if you measure from the deployment of TCP/IP) -- he spent the whole of his life
in the world of the Internet and he swam so smoothly and powerfully in that
world.
I am also angry -- a sad angry -- that
Aaron was subject to the law rather than to justice. For that I, at this point
with incomplete information, blame MIT as well as the prosecutors' office. We
will know more about MIT's role when Abelson makes his report and I hope that
we will find out more about paths not taken by the prosecutor's office in the
future.
At this point I do not know what to
feel about Heymann's role. From what I saw in him
during our talks I fully expect he felt he was doing the right thing. But I do
wish that his right thing had not contributed to the death of a person who had
so much more to give to the world.
Disclaimer:
Harvard has not expressed any opinion on Aaron's activities or his death, so
the above lament is mine.
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