Motherboard

  • All
  • Film + Video
  • Music
  • Art + Design
  • Gaming
  • Environment + The Body
  • Wonderful
  • Video Room
  • Open Collections
Technology and Philosophy The Future of Music Technology in Fashion The Future of Moving Pictures Our Joysticks, Our Consoles Do-It-Yourself Tech Beyond the Internet Space In the Lab Nature Technology and Love Myths and Weirdos Meme Culture Business and Politics Animals MB 2011 Mixtape Watch This Trailer View all

Welcome to Motherboard

Collapse

Motherboard is a celebration of the diversity and eclecticism of the culture that surrounds technology. Rather than squinting at technology through the lens of gizmos and gadgetry, Motherboard explores the ways it influences and affects music, art, design, film, gaming, sports, issues surrounding the environment, and everything else we find important.

So consider the floor open for group participation. It's simple: Get involved in an existing discussion, post your own related videos, write posts, comment, anything… you're now part of the Motherboard.

Learn more about Motherboard

New to Motherboard?

Then let us get you situated! Before you know it, you’ll be:

  • Writing, editing, and posting all your wildest technological musings
  • Commenting on stories and helping to push the conversation forward
  • Creating a personalized page and chatting with other users
  • And a whole lot more…
  • Join now
  • Login

Aaron Swartz, FBI Scapegoat

Posted by mattbriancon on Friday, Jul 22, 2011

  • Save this post
  • Aaronswartz_large
  • Next
  • Prev
Share Retweet
Add This

On July 19th, 24 year-old Aaron Swartz, Reddit cofounder and former Executive Director at Demand Progress, was arrested and charged with violating federal hacking laws. Swartz allegedly broke into multiple MIT buildings in order to hide laptops that could be used to automatically download journal articles from JSTOR, a service that normally charges many thousands of dollars for access to its database of journal articles but is offered free of charge to MIT students and faculty. The indictment goes on to suggest Swartz intended to redistribute the journal articles for free on the internet.

LulzSec and Anonymous have been wreaking havoc over the last few months and gain more attention from major news outlets with every stunt they pull. Those news outlets, however, haven’t yet had the opportunity to report any significant progress in the dismantling of either organization. Moreover, a recent report from the FBI claiming that they’d arrested the leader of LulzSec was immediately countered via the group’s official Twitter account saying:

Seems the glorious leader of LulzSec got arrested, it’s all over now… wait… we’re all still here! Which poor bastard did they take down?

As if on cue, along comes Aaron Swartz, ethics-wielding internet hero, who wants to liberate a few million scholarly journals locked – immorally, says Lawrence Lessig – behind a paywall. His mission spans several months during which time he used a bicycle helmet to break into server closets (remember the sweaty nerd in Ocean’s Eleven?) and evades MIT’s network admins by, wait for it, changing the MAC address of his network card. Sounds pretty cool and dangerous, but, when you think about it, Swartz’s antics can more aptly be likened to Sterling Archer’s baby town frolics than an elaborate heist. But surely he hacked into JSTOR?, you ask. Unfortunately, no, those articles are freely available to anyone on the MIT network. Hacking wasn’t necessary, only a script to automate the downloading process.

So is he guilty? Well, probably. We’ll have to see what prosecutors have in terms of evidence but it seems pretty straightforward. Swartz didn’t take many clever steps to hide his trail and the steps he did take could have been learned in a few minutes of Googling. But with all the internet crime going on these days (Netflix only recently surpassed BitTorrent as the #1 traffic hog), why arrest Swartz? Why not focus resources on protecting the power grid or hunting down LulzSec or educating companies on how to better protect themselves against cyber attacks?

The answer seems simple: Swartz is an easy target and he can be used as an example to others. It’s moments like this where the FBI, the Secret Service, and whoever else investigates Internet crimes to hold a press conference and say something like, “We’re tough on Internet crime.”

In reality they’re just tough on the little fish; the big fish get to sit back and laugh.

Bike helmet mask images courtesy Nick Douglas / Slacktory.

Connections

  • Lulzsec Comes Out of Retirement, Fires at News Corp Amid Phone Hacking Scandal
  • Dear Big Companies: Getting Hacked Is Good For You
  • Dear LulzSec, I Hope You Never Stop Hacking
  • Lulzsec Security Took Out the CIA
  • Rating:
  • rate 1
  • rate 2
  • rate 3
  • rate 4
  • rate 5
  • (4 ratings)5

Filed under:

  • Privacy and Security
  • Wonderful
  • Aaron Swartz
  • LulzSec
  • Anonymous
  • MIT

Flag as inappropriate

  • Send to a friend
  • Save this post

RSS

About the author

265535_1972704392584_1092240155_31943368_6459365_o_medium

mattbriancon

developer of softwares
New York, United States
Member since 2011

  • More on mattbriancon
  • View all mattbriancon's posts

Conversation Leaders

  • Profile2_theme_leader
  • Alec1_theme_leader
  • _mg_2752_theme_leader
  • Alex-pasternack_theme_leader
  • Headshot_theme_leader
  • Macface_theme_leader
  • Photo-4_theme_leader
  • 198144_10100444937463675_12400637_62766012_6835874_n_theme_leader

In the Discussions:

  • Privacy and Security
View all

Related Posts

  • Lulzsec_sidebar Dear Big Companies: Getting Hacked is Good For You
  • City1_sidebar Ones and Zeros: Weather We Like it or Not, We are Losing the War on Hacking, Our Satellites, and Our Bitcoins
  • Paul_stephenson1_sidebar Ones and Zeros: Facebook Bans Google+ Ads, Google+ Bans Anonymous

Blog Roll

  • Alt.Engadget
  • This Recording
  • BLDGBLOG
  • Matrixsynth
  • Mudd Up!
  • IEEE Spectrum
  • Thought Catalog
  • Devour
  • Babbage
  • Cyberology
  • Technosociology
  • Rhizome
  • Creators Project
  • VICE
  • Smithsonian
  • Atlantic Tech
  • Death and Taxes
  • BBC Horizon

Related posts

  • Dear Big Companies: Getting Hacked is Good For You

    The term “hack” and “hacker” have been dirty words for as long as anyone can remember. Whether it...

    Jun 08, 2011
    by Joshua_Kopstein
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • 1/0: Losing Weather Satellites and War on Hacking

    My pair of Chinatown bootleg Ray-Bans has passed the test of time. Maybe I’ll give the Chin...

    Jun 21, 2011
    by Ones_and_Zeros
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • 1/0: Facebook Bans Google+ Ads, Google+ Bans Anonymous

    One, two princes kneel before you/Thats what I said now/Princes, princes who adore you/just go ah...

    Jul 18, 2011
    by Ones_and_Zeros
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Murdoch Is Fake-Dead, Lulz Rises Again

    Even though we’re currently faced with things like cyber warfare and the possibility of eco...

    Jul 19, 2011
    by Joshua_Kopstein
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • 1/0: Gas Leaks, App Leaks

    Pluto’s planetary party just got bigger One: New Pluto Moon Discovered By Hubble Space Tele...

    Jul 21, 2011
    by Ones_and_Zeros
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • (video)

    2011 Was the Year of Anonymous

    After their visible hesitance to prominently cover various popular uprisings around the world, it... (video)

    Dec 21, 2011
    by Joshua_Kopstein
    • Save this post
    • Watch and discuss
  • Can One Attack Shut Down The Entire Internet?

    Online hacktivist collective Anonymous has had its hands full lately. Between the SOPA and ACTA p...

    Feb 16, 2012
    by Joshua_Kopstein
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Our Intelligence Is Dumb

    The most recent bombshell of confidential documents dropped by infamous watchdog organization Wik...

    Feb 29, 2012
    by Joshua_Kopstein
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Anonymous and Wikileaks Sitting in a Tree

    On Monday, Anonymous and Wikileaks joined efforts to reveal the inner workings of ‘global i...

    Feb 29, 2012
    by Lam_Thuy_Vo
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Sabu and the FBI Tricked Me

    _Sabu, one of the most vocal ‘leaders’ of the supposedly leaderless Anonymous, has al...

    Mar 06, 2012
    by DerekMead
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
    • Most Popular
    • Very Popular
    • Popular
    • Popular this Week
    • Most Recent
View more related

Motherboard loading...

End of transmission.

Welcome to Motherboard Explore How To More
Motherboard is a celebration of the diversity and eclecticism of the culture that surrounds technology. So consider the floor open for group participation.
  • All
  • Film + Video
  • Music
  • Art + Design
  • Gaming
  • Environment + The Body
  • Wonderful
  • Sorting content
  • Saving posts
  • What is a collection
  • How to become a leader
  • Posting content
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Vice
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Join Motherboard Watch Videos Here! Help About Motherboard
  • Subscribe to the RSS feed RSS © 2010 Vice All Rights Reserved
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site by AREA 17
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Subscribe to the RSS feed
  • Newsletter
  • Hey stranger
  • Join now
  • About MB
  • Login
  • Search Motherboard