Aaron on cover of Time magazine with Edward Snowden and Bradley Manning

4 views
Skip to first unread message

Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman

unread,
Jun 14, 2013, 8:41:47 AM6/14/13
to aaron_swartz
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2145506-1,00.html


The 21st century mole demands no payments for his secrets. He sees himself instead as an idealist, a believer in individual sovereignty and freedom from tyranny. Chinese and Russian spooks will not tempt him. Rather, it's the bits and bytes of an online political philosophy that attract his imagination, a hacker mentality founded on message boards in the 1980s, honed in chat rooms in the '90s and matured in recent online neighborhoods like Reddit and 4chan. He believes above all that information wants to be free, that privacy is sacred and that he has a responsibility to defend both ideas.

"The public needs to decide whether these programs and policies are right or wrong," said Edward Joseph Snowden, the 29-year-old former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor who admitted on June 6 to one of the most significant thefts of highly classified secrets in U.S. history. The documents he turned over to the press revealed a massive program to compile U.S. telephone records into a database for antiterrorism and counterintelligence investigations. Another program, called Prism, has given the NSA access to records at major online providers like Google, Facebook and Microsoft to search information on foreign suspects with court approval. The secret program has been under way for seven years.

Snowden is "no different than anybody else," he claimed. "I'm just another guy who sits there day to day in the office," he said in an interview with the Guardian, which broke the story along with the Washington Post. But Snowden, who was working as an analyst for the government contractor Booz Allen, is not just another guy. He is something new. More than 1.4 million Americans now hold top-secret security clearances in the military and the shadow world of intelligence. Most do not contact reporters and activists over encrypted e-mail in hopes of publishing secrets as civil disobedience. Few are willing to give up their house, their $122,000-a-year job, their girlfriend or their freedom to expose systems that have been approved by Congress and two Presidents, under the close monitoring of the federal courts. Snowden is different, and that difference is changing everything.

A Brave New World

The U.S. National Security infrastructure was built to protect the nation against foreign enemies and the spies they recruit. Twenty-something homegrown computer geeks like Snowden, with utopian ideas of how the world should work, scramble those assumptions. Just as antiwar protesters of the Vietnam era argued that peace, not war, was the natural state of man, this new breed of radical technophiles believes that transparency and personal privacy are the foundations of a free society. Secrecy and surveillance, therefore, are gateways to tyranny. And in the face of tyranny, the leakers believe, rebellion is noble. "There is no justice in following unjust laws," wrote Aaron Swartz, a storied computer hacker and an early employee of Reddit, in a 2008 manifesto calling for the public release of private documents. "We need to take information, wherever it is stored, make our copies and share them with the world."

....


Others have targeted academia and the law. Swartz, who committed suicide at the age of 26 in January while under federal indictment for hacking an academic computer, downloaded and publicly released millions of federal court documents from a U.S. court computer system in protest of a per-page fee for access. He was arrested for trying to download huge volumes of copyrighted academic articles from the costly JSTOR database at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Those who have been locked out are not standing idly by," he had argued about the need to liberate information to the public domain.

...


By the early 1990s, the hacktivists were organizing around larger goals, like ensuring online privacy for individuals. A hacker named Phil Zimmermann created a data-encryption program called PGP, which used a software technology that was classified as a "munition" under U.S. law and therefore banned for export. Zimmermann responded by publishing his code in a book, via MIT Press, since the export of printed matter is protected by the First Amendment. The movement that grew up around these efforts helped give birth to WikiLeaks. Today that same defiant spirit still dominates large swaths of the Internet, informing the actions of people like Snowden, Manning and Swartz. "It's a generation of kids who have been told again and again that behaviors that seem perfectly reasonable to them are criminal," says Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard law professor who was a mentor to Swartz.

...

Correction:
The original version of this story incorrectly identified Aaron Swartz as a co-founder of the website Reddit. In fact, he joined the company about 6 months after its inception.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2145506,00.html#ixzz2WC4YfvMv


--

This is my personal email address. If you are emailing me about SumOfUs-related matters, please email me at ta...@sumofus.org.


Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman
personal: tare...@gmail.com
work: ta...@sumofus.org
cell: +1 202 510 0065
skype: Tarendipitous

Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman

unread,
Jun 14, 2013, 10:16:01 AM6/14/13
to aaron_swartz
Wow I have no idea what happened there with all those characters. Here's what I thought I copied in:

Samuel Klein

unread,
Jun 14, 2013, 6:43:47 PM6/14/13
to Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman, aaron_swartz
Ouch. Most of this article is poorly researched and analyzed. Odd to
have Scherer writing such a piece in the first place.

SJ
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "Remember Aaron Swartz" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to aaron_swartz...@googlegroups.com.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
>
>



--
Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages