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Aaron Swartz Memorial at the Internet Archive

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    [Brewster Kahle] Welcome. And welcome to the
    celebration of the life and work of Aaron
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    Swartz, a man who was a spark for many of
    us. I would like to thank the staff of the
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    Internet Archive, Lisa Ryan, the organizer,
    Shannon Lee, Steve Walling, Karl Malamud and
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    Cindy Cohn for helping pull this together.
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    [applause]
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    [Brewster] As you probably know, there are
    memorials going on all over the world. Hackathons
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    going on. There's an AaronSw IRC Chat for
    those that are following the hackathons. And
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    these proceedings are in the public domain.
    This isn't the type of event we imagined for
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    this space, but I can think of no better.
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    To the organizer and coordinated for this
    evening is Shannon Lee, and he will start
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    our program. Thank you very much.
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    [Shannon Lee] Thank you all for being here.
    Aaron Swartz has left behind a challenging
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    legacy. Tonight, we're going to talk about
    Aaron and what he left behind, and what we
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    can do to carry it forward. We're going to
    have an array of speakers, beginning with
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    Danny O'Brien and ending with Karl Malamud,
    and after that we'll have an opportunity to
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    share right here. I will see you at the end
    of the speakers.
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    [Danny O'Brien] So I first met Aaron in 2001,
    when Aaron was, I guess, 14, and was already
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    a leading light working with Tim Berners-Lee
    on the project that we know as the Semantic
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    Web, an incredibly ambitious idea to encode,
    in machine-readable form, all of the world's
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    knowledge.
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    And of course being a journalist at the time,
    I seized on this opportunity to sneak an explanation
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    of the Semantic Web past my editor. It's almost
    impossible to get any editor to understand
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    the Semantic Web. But the idea of a 14-year-old
    boy helping Tim Berners-Lee will always pass
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    muster, even if they don't know who Tim Berners-Lee
    is.
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    The editor, of course, is in charge of titling
    the article, and with that supreme lack of
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    understand, he actually titled it, "A Teenager
    in a Million," which of course was to miss
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    the point entirely. The point was that Aaron's
    age wasn't a particularly unique thing and
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    Aaron himself wasn't the exceptional part
    of this.
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    The exceptional part of this was an institution
    that allowed someone like Aaron to walk in
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    through its door and, before anyone had noticed
    where he came from or what age he was or what
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    his background was, they allowed him to start
    contributing good work and learning from his
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    peers.
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    An institution is not truly open until somebody
    you could never even imagine exists walks
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    through the door. When Tim Berners-Lee describes
    these moments at Aaron's funeral a week ago,
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    you could see, in a way that only Tim Berners-Lee
    can convey, the sort of glee he had that at
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    last the system was working. These open mailing
    lists, this open discussion, this exchange
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    of information was bringing new people into
    building the web.
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    He told me then, "I was worried about revealing
    my age and I did my best to keep it a secret.
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    Now, I let my words speak for themselves,"
    and since then, so many words. Some written
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    in machine-readable form in Python, in computers.
    Some written in brimstone and sulfur for Congress-readable
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    forms and all of it in plain text. All of
    it in plain language for everyone to read.
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    And if he could not read enough words himself,
    his programs read and scraped and passed the
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    rest. Aaron loved beautiful code. I think
    the only time I really ever pained him was
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    when I'd said some program that he'd written
    and I'd looked at was unreadable. It turned
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    out that it wasn't actually his code at all.
    He'd written some code that had, in turn,
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    written that code.
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    [laughter]
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    And yet I think it still hurt, that somehow
    his own child had not inherited his own delicate
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    sensitivities.
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    Words fail me now, even though I have them
    written down here. I mean, try as hard as
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    Aaron did, I don't think you could ever encode
    all of his experience in words, and I don't
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    think that all of the relationships that he
    built between so many different peers and
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    so many new people coming in could be ever
    expressed in any number of RDF triplets.
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    I mean I can sort of try and convey the look
    Aaron's face when he played with my daughter
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    Erin, nine. There were some pictures downstairs
    that you may have saw him. But you can't really
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    convey that childish glee that most of us
    lose long before we begin we begin work on
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    the semantic web at least.
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    And I can't really describe to you the pain
    and frustration when Aaron so effectively
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    demolished a defense I had of John Searle's
    Chinese room argument, that I actually threw
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    down my knife and fork and stormed out of
    my own Christmas dinner.
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    [laughter]
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    Leaving, of course, the Turkey for Aaron to
    fail to eat.
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    [laughter]
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    There was always a sort of pleasure and ease
    in forgiving Aaron for those sort of arguments.
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    And also, to watch him so easily forgive the
    rest of us. And I don't think any archive
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    can hold those moments. But if I can share
    with you some code, if I can't share with
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    you the code that made up Aaron, I can, I
    hope, share with you the code that Aaron believed
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    could make more Aarons.
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    Aaron became Aaron because of his unfettered
    access to information and the knowledge and
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    sharing of his peers. He was very lucky in
    that respect. He had an incredibly loving
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    family who supported him who would pay for
    him to fly out to meetings. He had a computer.
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    He had all the privileges and benefits that
    being a young man in the United States of
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    America in the end of the 20th century have.
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    But he also had something new. He had a new
    advantage, which was that the gates of the
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    construction of this technology that was beginning
    to share information, was beginning to open
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    up, and he was one of the first, yes the youngest,
    but one of the first to take advantage of
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    that and use his curiosity and his drive,
    even at that age, to nip into there and beginning
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    sharing almost immediately with his peers.
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    And if anything bound together all of Aaron's
    crusades, it was his belief that he was not
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    alone in this. That he was not exceptional,
    and he believed he was not unique, and that
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    there were more than him out there with his
    curiosity and talent.
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    People say, when we talked about Aaron's work
    of taking the content of academic papers or
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    the content of the US legal system and opening
    it up for anyone to use and see and crunch
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    and peruse. You know, who really is this for?
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    Who wants to know about the legal system,
    can't in some way ask a friend or a contact
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    to get access to PACER? Who really has a craving
    for academic knowledge can't find somebody
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    and sneak their way in to MIT or another institution
    and just get that information, or work to
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    access it?
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    And those people forget, they forget that
    if Aaron was a teenager in a million, that
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    soon, very soon, as we continue the great
    work that we're indulged in here, that there
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    will be six billion people that we will connect
    to the world information networks. And out
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    of those six billion people there will 1.2
    billion teenagers.
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    And if my editors' statistics are correct-and
    he never understood statistics either, then
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    there will be 1,200 Aarons out there, there
    are 1,200 Aarons out there right now who are
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    as smart and engaged and as curious and as
    driver as Aaron was. But they simply don't
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    have access to that information. There is
    no closed archives, no carefully guarded Ivory
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    Tower, that can seat billions. But the open
    society, the open and world wide web, the
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    free culture that Aaron worked for, is for
    all of those people.
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    And if give them what they need, if we give
    them the knowledge to feed their curiosity
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    and the care we must never forget they, that
    amazing sort of resource of future Aarons
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    from Kabera, from Guangzhou or Asan. All of
    those people will come, and they will build
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    the kind of things that Aaron was dreaming
    of.
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    And so even though we've lost one Aaron, we
    do have a potential, by continuing his work,
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    to find so many more. Aaron told me back in
    2001 that one of the things that the web teaches
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    us is that everything is connected, hyperlinks,
    and that we should all work together, standards.
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    Too often school teaches us that everything
    is separate, and that we should all work alone.
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    I think one of the many, many tragedies of
    the situation that we find ourselves in now
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    is that, at least in some moment of Aaron's
    life, his belief that he was not alone failed
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    him, and for a few moments he believed himself
    to be alone.
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    And I'm sure, out there, there are many, many
    14-year-old children who feel the same way.
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    That they have that binding curiosity, that
    fascination and that urge to change the world.
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    And that worry for a moment that it's just
    them. And there are no tools and no capabilities
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    and no friends to help them continue in that
    path.
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    I don't think it's ever too soon to begin
    working with the rest of the world, and I
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    think we all need to stay together, and never,
    ever again leave our friends too alone. A
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    boy's will is the wind's will, and the thoughts
    of youth are long, long thoughts.
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    [applause]
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    [silence]
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    [Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman] The night before
    Aaron died, he and I shared a grilled cheese
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    sandwich. This was one of his favorite foods.
    As probably many of you know, there weren't
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    many of those favorite foods. It was a really
    good grilled cheese sandwich. He was really
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    happy about it.
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    A week before he died, we woke up one morning,
    and he said, "We really need to talk about
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    Bayesian statistics." I said, "Right now?
    It's Sunday morning. It's like 7: 00 AM. Can
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    it wait?" He said, "No, it's really important."
    We spent the next couple of hours working
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    through a naughty Bayesian statistics he'd
    already asked the Internet with no useful
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    responses.
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    I have the notes. We ended up with a naughty
    double integral that neither of us could solve,
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    but if anybody here wants to help me with
    the solution, let me know.
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    He was really excited the last couple of months.
    He was working on a drug policy research with
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    a friend of his, Matt Stoller, for GiveWell,
    and he would read these articles, all the
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    academic literature, talk to the experts.
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    He got really into this one particular study
    about an intervention that had been tried
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    in Hawaii for alcoholism. Control tests indicated
    that it got 90 percent of alcoholics dry in
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    the first month, and he was so bubbling over
    with excitement about all of it.
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    We went to Burlington, Vermont over New Years.
    He got the flu, but he came out and played
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    Mafia one evening with the friends that we
    rented a house with. I was really surprised,
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    because he didn't like playing games at all,
    but Ada, Danny's daughter, was there with
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    us, and he really wanted to see what would
    happen if Ada was the Mafia. [laughs] Unfortunately,
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    nobody selected Ada as the Mafia, which Ada
    was really annoyed about. [laughs]
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    One of the things that I loved about Aaron
    was the sheer number, and variety, and multitude
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    of wonderful, fascinating people who animated
    his life. I had the great privilege of sharing
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    that life with him for the last 20 months,
    but I know that I only met a small fraction
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    of the people whose lives he touched.
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    That's why I came out here today, because
    I know that many of you were important to
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    him, and I wanted to meet you, and I want
    you the stories like the stories I just told,
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    because I think it's really important that
    his friends, his family, his colleagues, his
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    admirers know that he had a lot to live for,
    and that he had a lot of happy moments in
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    those last few weeks and months.
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    I'm also here with another message. Aaron's
    death should radicalize us. The trial and
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    the case hung over our entire relationship.
    We started dating a few weeks before he was
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    indicted, a couple of months after he had
    been arrested.
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    I met his parents for the first time at 12:
    30 AM the night before the indictment, and
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    spent five hours with him in the courthouse
    the next day. They didn't know I existed before
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    that, so that was an interesting first meeting.
    [laughs] He hadn't told me what was going
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    on when we first started dating.
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    All I knew was that there was something bad
    happening in his life, and that I was a good
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    distraction from it. He called it the "bad
    thing," and I had wild speculation about what
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    it might be. My leading candidate theory at
    one point was that he was having an affair
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    with Elizabeth Warren and was going to ruin
    her career.
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    [laughter]
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    He called me one night when I was at Frisbee
    practice in DC, and he was in Boston. He said,
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    "The bad thing might be in the news tomorrow.
    Do you want to hear what it is from me, or
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    do you want to read about it in the news?"
    I said, "I want to hear from you."
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    He said, "Well, I've been arrested for downloading
    too many academic journal articles, and they're
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    trying to make an example out of me," and
    I said, "Well, that doesn't actually sound
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    like a very big deal." [laughs] He paused
    for a second and he said, "Yeah, I guess it's
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    not like anybody has cancer." In the end,
    it kind of was like that.
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    The only time I was ever really worried about
    him, before the last week, was when he was
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    trying to decide whether to accept the plea
    bargain. The whole thing was so hard and so
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    stressful, and he felt he carried so much
    of the weight of it on his own. He didn't
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    want to involve any of his friends. He wanted
    to protect people, but he wasn't very good
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    at protecting himself.
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    I went to Boston with him last month in December
    for a hearing, and the judge granted another
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    evidentiary hearing about whether evidence
    should be admitted, and the trial was delayed
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    for another couple of months.
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    He came out of the courtroom, and I tried
    to give him a hug, and he pushed me away.
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    He said, "Not in front of Heymann. Not in
    front of Steve Heymann, the prosecutor." He
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    said, "I don't want to show him that. I don't
    want to show him any vulnerability."
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    I think Aaron made the wrong choice two weeks
    ago. I think the odds were decent at the trial,
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    and I think, even if he hadn't won, that life
    still was worth living, but I think he woke
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    up two years after this ordeal started, and
    I think he just couldn't face another day
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    of the stress, the uncertainty, the lack of
    control over his own destiny.
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    Aaron's death should radicalize us, and I
    mean that specifically about us, about you,
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    if you're here in this room or if you're watching
    this online. Aaron died because of deep injustice
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    in this world. Aaron loved to talk about the
    "5 Whys" of the Toyota management system,
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    so I'm going to ask why. Why did Aaron die?
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    Aaron died in part because we live in a system
    where the constitutional rights we've all
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    come to believe in, through civic classes
    and through watching "Law & Order," don't
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    actually apply in the real world. There's
    no right to a speedy trial. It had been two
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    years since Aaron was arrested. We still didn't
    have all the evidence that the government...the
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    government still hadn't turned over all of
    the evidence to us, that they were constitutionally
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    required to do so.
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    Why does that happen? In part, it's because
    the system is so clogged up with cases, and
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    has so few human resources, it takes years
    for practically anybody who actually wants
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    to go to trial to find out whether they're
    guilty from a jury of their peers.
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    It takes them years because the system is
    so clogged up, and so under-resourced, with
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    drug cases and with the senseless overcrowding
    of our criminal justice system. Prosecutors
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    aren't used to going to trial. Last year,
    only three percent of all federal charges
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    were taken to trial. Most of the rest were
    resolved in plea bargaining.
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    Plea bargaining processes give prosecutors
    enormous amounts of power. Imagine being totally
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    innocent of any crime and not having the resources
    that Aaron had at his disposal, and the networks,
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    and the support. Many people feel they have
    no choice but to accept a plea bargain. They
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    can't afford lawyers for two years.
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    You could say, in some sense, that Aaron's
    death was caused by the war on drugs. He wasn't
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    a victim directly, but he was a casualty at
    that war, that's aimed, actually, at quite
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    different people from Aaron.
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    Aaron's death should radicalize us. He died
    because of a prosecutor and a US attorney
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    who had immense individual power over his
    life, and were more interested in making a
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    high-profile example out of Aaron than in
    justice or in mercy.
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    Why did they do it? In the case of the prosecutor,
    Steve Heymann, the best theory I can offer
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    is that he's simply a vindictive old man who
    really doesn't like young, upstart whippersnappers,
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    like Aaron, who are trying to save the world.
    Heymann's the kind of guy who wants to claim
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    a notch on his belt and high-five other prosecutors
    at lunch, but we have to follow the "Whys."
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    Why does this man have the power to ruin the
    life of someone like Aaron? We can trace the
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    problem to tough-on-crime initiatives that
    have systematically transferred power from
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    the hands of judges to prosecutors.
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    We can trace it to punitive sentencing guidelines
    and ambiguous overreaching laws, like the
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    CFAA, that give prosecutors the power to charge
    someone with decades in prison for a victimless
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    crime. In the case of Carmen Ortiz, the US
    attorney who's Heymann's boss, Aaron's case
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    was a stepping stone to higher political ambitions.
  • 20:49 - 20:53
    Ortiz wanted to be a judge, or a governor,
    or a senator someday. She probably still wants
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    to be. Unfortunately, in our society, one
    of the well-trodden paths to elected office
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    is through the prosecutor's office.
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    That means that from mayors' offices to congress,
    leaders are disproportionately people who've
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    made their name in being tough on crime, the
    people who've spent the bulk of their career
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    trying to lock people up. They're people whose
    job it is to be punitive and not just or merciful.
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    That's how we end up with these kinds of laws
    to begin with.
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    They're people who embody a legal system that
    locks up more than 25 percent of the prisoners
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    in the world, and we have only three percent
    of the world's population. Why do we vote
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    for these people? Why do we provide them with
    the incentives we do? Why do we, as a country,
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    applaud and reward them, and build structures
    around them, as they lock up more than one-third
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    of the black men in our country?
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    Aaron's death should radicalize us because
    he's probably the first person that most people
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    in this room have ever met who got swept up
    by this system, but there are literally millions
  • 21:56 - 22:01
    of others whose lives are destroyed in this
    country, and Aaron would've been the last
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    person who would want us to fetishize his
    experiences or to treat him as exceptional.
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    In response to Aaron's death, I and his family
    are calling for five things. First, Steve
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    Heymann and Carmen Ortiz must be held accountable.
  • 22:16 - 22:18
    [applause]
  • 22:18 - 22:26
    Second, MIT has lost its way, and it must
    find it again. MIT could've saved Aaron with
  • 22:26 - 22:31
    a single public statement, and it refused.
  • 22:31 - 22:32
    [applause]
  • 22:32 - 22:37
    Third, all academic research from all time
    should be made openly accessible to anyone
  • 22:37 - 22:40
    with an Internet connection.
  • 22:40 - 22:43
    [applause]
  • 22:43 - 22:50
    Fourth, we have to amend the Computer Fraud
    and Abuse Act to prevent prosecutors from
  • 22:50 - 22:53
    these kinds of overreaches.
  • 22:53 - 22:56
    [applause]
  • 22:56 - 23:02
    Fifth, we have to reform a criminal justice
    system where we incarcerate millions of people,
  • 23:02 - 23:06
    and prosecutors through the book at someone
    like Aaron, but not a single banker has gone
  • 23:06 - 23:13
    to prison since the financial crisis.
  • 23:13 - 23:19
    [applause]
  • 23:19 - 23:24
    Aaron's death should radicalize us, but Aaron's
    life should also radicalize us in a very different
  • 23:24 - 23:32
    way. One of Aaron's favorite shows was "Louie."
    There's an episode, and I'm going to do my
  • 23:32 - 23:37
    best Louie impression, which probably isn't
    very good, the episode where Louie gives a
  • 23:37 - 23:39
    little stand-up routine.
  • 23:39 - 23:47
    "I drive an Infiniti. That's really evil.
    There are people who just starved to death.
  • 23:47 - 23:52
    That's all they ever did. There are people
    who are born and go, 'I'm hungry.' Then they
  • 23:52 - 23:57
    die, and that's all they ever got to do. Meanwhile,
    I'm driving in my car having a great time,
  • 23:57 - 23:59
    and I sleep like a baby."
  • 23:59 - 24:04
    "It's totally my fault, because I could trade
    my Infiniti in for any other car, and I'd
  • 24:04 - 24:09
    get back like $20,000, and I could save hundreds
    of people from dying of starvation with that
  • 24:09 - 24:18
    money, and every day, I don't do it. Every
    day, I make them die with my car."
  • 24:18 - 24:22
    Aaron loved that routine, and he realized
    something when we watched it together. He
  • 24:22 - 24:27
    realized that Louie copied this bit right
    out of Peter Singer. This is a Peter Singer
  • 24:27 - 24:33
    essay as a comedy routine. Peter Singer was
    one of the Aaron's favorite philosophers,
  • 24:33 - 24:36
    and he's a really uncomfortable philosopher.
    A lot of people don't like thinking about
  • 24:36 - 24:39
    Peter Singer. Here's why.
  • 24:39 - 24:43
    Let's say you knew you had the power to change
    a law that would save innocent people's lives,
  • 24:43 - 24:48
    maybe stopping a carcinogen from polluting
    ground water near a town. Let's say you knew
  • 24:48 - 24:53
    it would save 10 people's lives, and you chose
    to do something else instead, something that
  • 24:53 - 24:59
    didn't have much bearing or impact on the
    world. Are you culpable? Peter Singer would
  • 24:59 - 25:01
    say yes.
  • 25:01 - 25:05
    Most of us studiously avoid answering that
    question, because the truth is, we're faced
  • 25:05 - 25:09
    with questions like, "Should we trade in our
    Infiniti?" or, "Should we work on the carcinogen?"
  • 25:09 - 25:18
    every day. It's really hard to live your life
    thinking about that, but Aaron's life should
  • 25:18 - 25:19
    radicalize us.
  • 25:19 - 25:26
    Aaron lived a Singerian life more than anyone
    else I've ever met. Aaron had money, we all
  • 25:26 - 25:31
    know he could've had a lot more if he had
    tried, but he lived out of backpacks and he
  • 25:31 - 25:32
    stayed on people's couches.
  • 25:32 - 25:37
    Sometimes, I'll admit, it went a little too
    far, like the time we'd been dating for a
  • 25:37 - 25:41
    few months, and we were meeting up in Boston,
    and it was his responsibility to find us a
  • 25:41 - 25:46
    place to stay. He thought that an air mattress
    on his brother Noah's bathroom floor was perfectly
  • 25:46 - 25:51
    sufficient, [laughs] but I respected him for
    it.
  • 25:51 - 25:55
    He didn't buy an Infiniti. He didn't get a
    nice apartment. When he died, he left his
  • 25:55 - 26:02
    estate primarily to GiveWell, probably the
    most Singerian of all charities, but living
  • 26:02 - 26:07
    a life of personal austerity and charity isn't
    enough. Aaron felt responsible not just for
  • 26:07 - 26:11
    the direct costs of his lifestyle, but for
    the opportunity costs. He felt responsible
  • 26:11 - 26:15
    for the carcinogens he wasn't stopping.
  • 26:15 - 26:20
    Here in Silicon Valley, the idea of changing
    the world is no mirage. You see examples all
  • 26:20 - 26:26
    around you, every day, of people who changed
    the world, and Aaron was one of those people,
  • 26:26 - 26:28
    but the question is, how are they changing
    the world?
  • 26:28 - 26:34
    Facebook has changed the world, sure, but
    is the world better off because of Facebook?
  • 26:34 - 26:38
    Even more importantly, if you're deciding
    whether to take a job at Facebook, is that
  • 26:38 - 26:41
    the place in the world where you can do the
    most good?
  • 26:41 - 26:48
    Aaron wanted to do the most good. He wanted
    to apply the Lean Startup framework to impact.
  • 26:48 - 26:54
    He was learning and iterating. He thought
    we all needed to think both bigger and smaller.
  • 26:54 - 26:59
    He said to a few of my friends once, "The
    revolution will be A/B tested."
  • 26:59 - 27:00
    [laughter]
  • 27:00 - 27:07
    That's what he was trying to do. I'm here
    to ask the hard questions today. If you're
  • 27:07 - 27:12
    not already working to change the criminal
    justice system in the US, what are you working
  • 27:12 - 27:16
    on? Is it more important than that? It might
    be. There are more important things. There
  • 27:16 - 27:23
    are places where you can have more impact,
    but there are so many ways, so many things,
  • 27:23 - 27:30
    that need to be changed about this world.
    Which one of them are you working on?
  • 27:30 - 27:34
    Aaron's death should radicalize us, and his
    life should radicalize us. The fact is, we
  • 27:34 - 27:39
    live in a world in which very few people we
    know pay the ultimate price for their political
  • 27:39 - 27:44
    beliefs. We live in a world in which very
    few people we know even suffer serious life-altering
  • 27:44 - 27:49
    consequences for their political beliefs,
    but we live in a runaway global political
  • 27:49 - 27:52
    economy that's taking people's lives every
    day.
  • 27:52 - 27:58
    Aaron wasn't trying to become a martyr when
    he downloaded those JSTOR articles, but he
  • 27:58 - 28:02
    was taking a risk on behalf of the billions
    of people around the world who grew up without
  • 28:02 - 28:07
    his privilege. More of us need to do that.
  • 28:07 - 28:16
    There are so many ways to have impact, so
    many ways to help people. Aaron had an exchange
  • 28:16 - 28:21
    with David Segal, who runs Demand Progress,
    the group that he founded, that many of you
  • 28:21 - 28:24
    know from the SOPA fight.
  • 28:24 - 28:29
    Aaron loved recounting this conversation.
    David called him one night, and said to Aaron,
  • 28:29 - 28:35
    "Remember that year when we defeated SOPA,
    got indefinite detention ruled unconstitutional,
  • 28:35 - 28:41
    and got both political parties to incorporate
    Internet freedom into their platforms at the
  • 28:41 - 28:46
    conventions?" That was Aaron, David Segal,
    and a couple other people. They did all that
  • 28:46 - 28:48
    in one year.
  • 28:48 - 28:52
    Everybody here is capable of that kind of
    change. There are so many places in our world
  • 28:52 - 28:57
    where that kind of change can happen, just
    from having somebody there, somebody paying
  • 28:57 - 29:01
    attention, somebody pushing.
  • 29:01 - 29:06
    If you're a programmer or technologist, like
    many of you in the audience today, you have
  • 29:06 - 29:12
    special powers and special responsibilities.
    I went to a talk once that Aaron gave, where
  • 29:12 - 29:17
    he spoke to maybe a couple dozen people, like
    the people in this room, to programmers who
  • 29:17 - 29:23
    he was trying to convince to work in politics.
    He told them, "You can do magic."
  • 29:23 - 29:28
    Aaron really could do magic, and I'm dedicated
    to making sure that his magic doesn't end
  • 29:28 - 29:44
    with his death. I hope you'll join me.
  • 29:44 - 29:46
    [applause]
  • 29:46 - 30:03
    [Lisa Rein] I first met Aaron online on various
    W3C mailing lists for XML and RDF. He kind
  • 30:03 - 30:11
    of came out of nowhere at the end of 2001,
    as far as I could tell. Aaron's comments were
  • 30:11 - 30:15
    thoughtful and informative, and it became
    clear pretty quickly that he had a better
  • 30:15 - 30:20
    understanding of markup languages and data
    modeling than a lot of others on the list,
  • 30:20 - 30:23
    even some of the veterans.
  • 30:23 - 30:29
    Aaron had a talent for simplifying things
    and getting to the heart of everyone's concerns.
  • 30:29 - 30:35
    He was also rather politically disarming because
    he was, well, a kid, a kid with no ulterior
  • 30:35 - 30:42
    motives except wanting to be included and
    taken seriously, as seriously as others.
  • 30:42 - 30:48
    In April 2002, during the very early stages
    of the Creative Commons, I let Aaron know
  • 30:48 - 30:53
    that we were having a technical meeting at
    Harvard that I wanted him to attend. That
  • 30:53 - 31:01
    was it. I really wanted to include him in
    the whole project almost as equally as I was
  • 31:01 - 31:09
    involved in the project. I told him this was
    happening for real, and with him included.
  • 31:09 - 31:16
    It was then that he let me know that he was
    only 14 years old, and that I needed to give
  • 31:16 - 31:20
    his mother a call so he could figure things
    out.
  • 31:20 - 31:22
    [laughter]
  • 31:22 - 31:28
    When I first insisted that Aaron attend this
    meeting, everybody, even Lawrence Lessig,
  • 31:28 - 31:35
    at first thought that was really weird. "Do
    you need Aaron to do your job?" was a pretty
  • 31:35 - 31:42
    popular question, and the answer was clearly,
    "Yes." I needed Aaron to make sure that our
  • 31:42 - 31:48
    licensing markup was the absolute best that
    it could be.
  • 31:48 - 31:52
    People were usually skeptical about Aaron
    and his abilities when they first found out
  • 31:52 - 31:58
    he was only 14. But once they spoke to him
    for even a little while, he would always win
  • 31:58 - 32:06
    them over. I knew if Lessig met him in person
    that that would be that, and it was. Aaron
  • 32:06 - 32:12
    was growing up to become quite the technological
    statesman.
  • 32:12 - 32:17
    So my strategy, in the spring of 2002, was
    to introduce Aaron to as many people as I
  • 32:17 - 32:25
    could, and to introduce him to the right people.
    This included people from the EFF and the
  • 32:25 - 32:31
    Internet Archive, mainly, and also included
    going to cool events like South By Southwest.
  • 32:31 - 32:38
    In 2003, when he tried to get his own room
    in the cool hotel, right across from the venue,
  • 32:38 - 32:45
    but ended up getting a room in the janky hotel
    down the road with me, where I could be his
  • 32:45 - 32:47
    official adult supervision.
  • 32:47 - 32:49
    [laughter]
  • 32:49 - 32:54
    In October 2002, Aaron flew out to Washington,
    DC, to camp out in front of the Supreme Court
  • 32:54 - 33:00
    with me and about eight other people. This
    was the night before Lawrence Lessig's oral
  • 33:00 - 33:10
    argument in Eldred v. Ashcroft. This is the
    Eldred shirt from that. We were rather surprised
  • 33:10 - 33:15
    that Aaron convinced his mother to let him
    go. But there he was, staying in the same
  • 33:15 - 33:17
    bed and breakfast where I was staying.
  • 33:17 - 33:23
    I told them he was sort of like my little
    brother, and that wasn't very far from the
  • 33:23 - 33:32
    truth. He was a little brother that I ended
    up [crying] looking up to. EFF staff technologist
  • 33:32 - 33:39
    Seth Schoen took over as Aaron's chaperone
    pretty quickly during that trip to Washington,
  • 33:39 - 33:40
    DC.
  • 33:40 - 33:46
    There was a moment at about one AM when Aaron
    asked if he could walk around the block with
  • 33:46 - 33:53
    Seth. I thought they were kidding at first.
    Were they serious? Were they crazy? But then
  • 33:53 - 33:58
    I realized it was one of those right-of-passage
    moments. Plus I realized he wouldn't be by
  • 33:58 - 34:02
    himself, he was with Seth.
  • 34:02 - 34:07
    I think at that moment I passed on the torch
    to Seth as Aaron's west coast guardian. But
  • 34:07 - 34:14
    we always stayed in touch. His birthday was
    two days before mine, and he would remember
  • 34:14 - 34:19
    my birthday almost every year, and would send
    me a nice little email wishing me a good next
  • 34:19 - 34:30
    year. Thank you.
  • 34:30 - 34:42
    [Seth Schoen] As Lisa was just recounting,
    I met Aaron at the Supreme Court in October
  • 34:42 - 34:49
    of 2002, and we had gone to hear the oral
    argument in Eldred v. Ashcroft. Most of us
  • 34:49 - 34:54
    non-lawyers had to spend the night sleeping
    in the street in line in front of the court
  • 34:54 - 34:55
    in order to get a ticket.
  • 34:55 - 34:59
    The line for the oral argument starts the
    night before. But even though Aaron was a
  • 34:59 - 35:06
    teenager, he was Larry Lessig's personal guest
    at the argument. So since he had a ticket,
  • 35:06 - 35:10
    he had the luxury of spending the night in
    a hotel, which his parents apparently really
  • 35:10 - 35:12
    appreciated.
  • 35:12 - 35:16
    But Aaron decided to spend most of the night
    and most of the morning before the argument
  • 35:16 - 35:22
    hanging out with us at the encampment in front
    of the court. In part to show solidarity with
  • 35:22 - 35:28
    the people who hadn't received a ticket, and
    in part for the thrill of meeting actual,
  • 35:28 - 35:31
    grown-up copyright activists.
  • 35:31 - 35:32
    [laughter]
  • 35:32 - 35:37
    Aaron was truly star struck to meet people
    he thought of as legendary copyright reform
  • 35:37 - 35:43
    activists. But within a decade, Aaron himself
    would be among the most effective grassroots
  • 35:43 - 35:47
    copyright activists in the whole world.
  • 35:47 - 35:52
    At that moment he was the little kid markup
    and metadata expert that Larry Lessig admired
  • 35:52 - 35:58
    enough to give him a front row Supreme Court
    seat. And Aaron spent the evening with us
  • 35:58 - 36:03
    as we ordered pizza, which he could actually
    eat, for delivery to the sidewalk outside
  • 36:03 - 36:08
    the Supreme Court, which was apparently not
    a very unusual request for pizzerias in DC.
  • 36:08 - 36:09
    [laughter]
  • 36:09 - 36:15
    And all of us gossiped about copyright law
    for a couple of hours. I saw Aaron again in
  • 36:15 - 36:24
    December. My friends Leonard and Sumana found
    a picture, he's visiting my house, and I come,
  • 36:24 - 36:29
    like some people here, from a book family
    and I have a lot of books and we spent about
  • 36:29 - 36:35
    three hours with Leonard and Sumana and Aaron
    and I just sitting on my bed sort of manually
  • 36:35 - 36:38
    following hyperlinks between books.
  • 36:38 - 36:38
    [laughter]
  • 36:38 - 36:45
    "Oh, that book! Oh, well that's a reference
    to that book." Aaron was there because Larry
  • 36:45 - 36:51
    Lessig was unveiling his Creative Commons
    project in San Francisco. And Lessig had invited
  • 36:51 - 36:57
    Aaron, clad in a T-shirt, probably the youngest
    person in the entire hall, up on stage to
  • 36:57 - 37:03
    talk about metadata. It was very awkward.
    Aaron was trying to describe why it was useful
  • 37:03 - 37:07
    to be able to represent bibliographic information
    in a machine-readable format.
  • 37:07 - 37:11
    And in fact Aaron was always trying to describe
    why it was useful to be able to represent
  • 37:11 - 37:14
    bibliographic information in a machine-readable
    format.
  • 37:14 - 37:15
    [laughter]
  • 37:15 - 37:19
    The audience had had a few drinks, I think,
    and wasn't as focused as it might have been,
  • 37:19 - 37:23
    and didn't really care to envision this beautiful
    feature in which search engines would make
  • 37:23 - 37:28
    it easy for everyone to find works they could
    legally reuse and build upon. Which they now
  • 37:28 - 37:31
    can, thanks to Aaron's work.
  • 37:31 - 37:36
    But the audience didn't seem to get it. Lessig
    was very gracious and he basically said to
  • 37:36 - 37:42
    the crowd, "See, our project is going to succeed
    and it's going to succeed because we have
  • 37:42 - 37:48
    this genius creating our infrastructure."
    Aaron reminded me how frustrating it is to
  • 37:48 - 37:52
    be curious about things that other people
    don't understand. Or that other people regard
  • 37:52 - 37:54
    as trivial or bizarre.
  • 37:54 - 38:00
    He wrote a blog post about a theory that one's
    degree of nearsightedness is affected by blood
  • 38:00 - 38:05
    oxygen levels, and that it might be possible
    to use eye exercise to systematically reduce
  • 38:05 - 38:06
    nearsightedness.
  • 38:06 - 38:11
    "Aaron," he wrote, "was already experimenting
    on himself to see if it would work, and he
  • 38:11 - 38:17
    said he wished he could meet a girl who wouldn't
    laugh at this project." Later, Aaron met Seth
  • 38:17 - 38:23
    Roberts, a researcher who advocates self-experimentation
    as a way of generating potentially-useful
  • 38:23 - 38:25
    wild ideas about health.
  • 38:25 - 38:30
    Roberts and Aaron got along extremely well.
    I think that Roberts, like many other people,
  • 38:30 - 38:36
    felt that Aaron naturally generated potentially
    useful wild ideas about absolutely everything.
  • 38:36 - 38:42
    I visited Aaron in his dorm at Stanford a
    few years later. I was thrilled that he had
  • 38:42 - 38:45
    the opportunity to study at such a great university.
  • 38:45 - 38:50
    But Aaron was alienated from Stanford. He
    had few friends, and the students around him
  • 38:50 - 38:56
    weren't curious about the things he was curious
    about. This wasn't the way his Stanford adventure
  • 38:56 - 39:01
    was supposed to pan out. I helped him pack
    for his flight to Boston for his interview
  • 39:01 - 39:07
    with Paul Graham, who was starting a fund
    to invest in young people just like Aaron.
  • 39:07 - 39:15
    It want well. Aaron dropped out of Stanford
    and moved to Boston. In 2006, just after Condé
  • 39:15 - 39:19
    Nast acquired reddit and just before they
    fired Aaron, Aaron and I were at a hacker
  • 39:19 - 39:26
    conference together in Berlin. To Larry Lessig's
    chagrin, Aaron and Lessig had, at that time,
  • 39:26 - 39:30
    fallen out of touch. Perhaps neither of them
    were deeply involved in the day-to-day work
  • 39:30 - 39:34
    of Creative Commons, which had brought them
    together.
  • 39:34 - 39:38
    Aaron had gone off to work in the startup
    world while simultaneously deepening his study
  • 39:38 - 39:44
    of left-wind politics, macroeconomics, and
    sociology. Lessig and Aaron were both planning
  • 39:44 - 39:49
    to tell America, as matter of some urgency,
    what had gone wrong with the American project,
  • 39:49 - 39:52
    but they had slightly different diagnoses.
  • 39:52 - 39:57
    Our friend and I took Aaron out to Wannsee,
    where Lessig was spending a year at the American
  • 39:57 - 40:04
    Academy in Berlin. Lessig looked extraordinarily
    proud to see Aaron. Their meeting had, for
  • 40:04 - 40:08
    me, the sense of an extraordinarily poignant
    reunion, as if they hadn't seen each other
  • 40:08 - 40:13
    in 20 years. Of course they had actually seen
    each other a few months before.
  • 40:13 - 40:17
    But my friend and I left the two of them alone
    for an hour or so, and I remember as we walked
  • 40:17 - 40:24
    away, seeing Lessig and Aaron leaning a wall
    at the Wannsee train station, talking animatedly
  • 40:24 - 40:29
    to each other. It reminded me of the scene
    at the climax of the German film "Goodbye
  • 40:29 - 40:34
    Lenin!" where we can see but not hear the
    actors talking about incredibly urgent matters,
  • 40:34 - 40:39
    and we have to imagine for ourselves what
    they must be saying to each other.
  • 40:39 - 40:43
    And I thought, Lessig is so proud-his protégé
    is all grown up and he's come back to show
  • 40:43 - 40:51
    his respect for his teacher. Aaron was a free
    speech absolutist's, free speech absolutist,
  • 40:51 - 40:57
    an idealist's idealist, an activist's activist,
    and, I must say, a libertarian socialist's
  • 40:57 - 40:59
    libertarian socialist.
  • 40:59 - 41:01
    [laughter]
  • 41:01 - 41:07
    His credo was that bits are not a bug, that
    come hell or high water we should celebrate,
  • 41:07 - 41:11
    and not fear, people's ability to communicate
    to each other whatever they might choose to
  • 41:11 - 41:16
    communicate, and the infrastructure that supports
    that ability.
  • 41:16 - 41:21
    Aaron came of age a long time after the end
    of the cypherpunk movement. But he always
  • 41:21 - 41:23
    seemed like a cypherpunk movement. But he
    always seemed like a cypherpunk and lived
  • 41:23 - 41:27
    up to the notion that cypherpunks write code.
  • 41:27 - 41:32
    He channeled all sorts of different idealisms
    of supposedly bygone eras. You would have
  • 41:32 - 41:37
    thought he was too young to know about those
    idealisms. And he did it in a way that mixed
  • 41:37 - 41:43
    intelligence, creativity, and humor. In the
    long run, Aaron felt that he was going to
  • 41:43 - 41:47
    fix the world, mainly by clearly explaining
    it to people.
  • 41:47 - 41:48
    [laughter]
  • 41:48 - 41:54
    I believe Aaron grew up to be exactly the
    person that he would have been most astonished
  • 41:54 - 41:59
    and excited to meet in the line in front of
    the Supreme Court. I've never known anyone
  • 41:59 - 42:04
    else like him.
  • 42:04 - 42:18
    [Peter Eckersley] So I know we have all been
    spending a lot of time thinking about Aaron
  • 42:18 - 42:24
    and his life and what kind of person he was
    and what he did. And I know many of you in
  • 42:24 - 42:30
    the room knew him, knew him well. Others probably
    never got to meet him in person, saw him on
  • 42:30 - 42:38
    a mailing list or read his blog posts. And
    then now, trying to figure out what we've
  • 42:38 - 42:40
    lost, who we've lost.
  • 42:40 - 42:46
    And for me, you know I was lucky enough, I
    got to live with Aaron for a while, and we
  • 42:46 - 42:51
    got to be good friends and work on things
    together. But I found I was always trying
  • 42:51 - 42:57
    to figure out exactly who he was and what
    he was up to. Because he was such a complicated
  • 42:57 - 43:06
    and contradictory human being, and he'd get
    you in these ways that you weren't expecting.
  • 43:06 - 43:11
    Some of this was simple, obvious stuff. You
    know, I, look-he and I had met before, but
  • 43:11 - 43:17
    we moved to San Francisco at the same time.
    I came here to work for the EFF. He was just
  • 43:17 - 43:22
    in the process of selling reddit and going
    to Condé Nast and going through the messy
  • 43:22 - 43:28
    divorce that he had with the other cofounders.
    And so I sent him an email and said, "Hey,
  • 43:28 - 43:35
    I'm setting up a sharehouse. Like, do you
    want a place to live?" And he said yes.
  • 43:35 - 43:39
    And so we had this rambling Victorian in this
    apartment building. And I said, "Oh, we've
  • 43:39 - 43:43
    got all these open rooms we need to fill."
    And he's like, "Oh, there's this tiny little
  • 43:43 - 43:51
    one in the corner, I'll take that." This room
    was the size of a-you know, it was a closet,
  • 43:51 - 43:54
    basically. We were pretty sure he was the
    wealthiest person in the building. He'd just
  • 43:54 - 44:00
    sold reddit, but he wanted this tiny little
    thing.
  • 44:00 - 44:08
    And getting to know him was weird, like...I'd,
    I knew him, I knew his blog, I had met him
  • 44:08 - 44:17
    before. But living with him, the first experience,
    he was so shy. Like, he'd just be there, and
  • 44:17 - 44:24
    like, in his own little world, struggling
    to talk to people, until the conversation
  • 44:24 - 44:31
    took the right turn. You'd say the right thing
    to him, and he would come alive, and he would
  • 44:31 - 44:33
    come so alive.
  • 44:33 - 44:39
    I remember Danny mentioned the Chinese room
    argument, but I remember the day that somehow
  • 44:39 - 44:45
    I prodded him about that. And then for the
    next week, you know, like we were going at
  • 44:45 - 44:49
    it. Like, I think he was totally wrong about
    the Chinese room argument, actually. I still
  • 44:49 - 44:50
    do.
  • 44:50 - 44:51
    [laughter]
  • 44:51 - 44:57
    His position was crazy. He defended a crazy
    position very well, and I had to argue him
  • 44:57 - 45:03
    into so many weird corners to get anywhere.
    I remember another scene, we had a film crew
  • 45:03 - 45:07
    who showed up and stayed in our house and
    filmed this thing, "Steal This Film." You
  • 45:07 - 45:10
    can go and see it on the Internet. You can
    see Aaron in it.
  • 45:10 - 45:15
    They were a documentary crew talking about
    copyright and trying to film these takes in
  • 45:15 - 45:18
    the middle of the night. You know, our cramped
    little living room, and everyone was kind
  • 45:18 - 45:24
    of drunk and there was chaos and I remember
    some of us were struggling to say anything
  • 45:24 - 45:30
    coherent to a camera. But someone pointed
    a camera at Aaron and he caught fire.
  • 45:30 - 45:39
    Like, he just...he taught me how to, like,
    speak to a room or speak to a television or
  • 45:39 - 45:45
    whatever it was. He just had a message that
    he'd simplified out of the ether and could
  • 45:45 - 45:52
    deliver. And that was the same skill he turned
    to politics and to so much else that he did
  • 45:52 - 45:59
    in his intellectual life, and it was beautiful
    to watch.
  • 45:59 - 46:05
    And he paired that with this...you know, honestly,
    he had a flare for self-promotion. There wouldn't
  • 46:05 - 46:10
    be hundreds of people in this room and hundreds
    of people in all the rooms for all the memorials
  • 46:10 - 46:14
    that he's had in different cities, and millions
    of people reading about him, if he didn't
  • 46:14 - 46:20
    have some little talent at getting the things
    he was doing out to the world in a way that
  • 46:20 - 46:27
    people would notice. People noticed his 16-year-old
    self. His 14-year-old self.
  • 46:27 - 46:33
    But he wasn't just a giant ego who kind of
    was out there promoting himself because he
  • 46:33 - 46:40
    thought he was awesome. He actually...The
    one thing he failed to care about, often,
  • 46:40 - 46:48
    was taking care of himself. And I remember,
    like, living with him and trying to get him
  • 46:48 - 46:52
    to eat and...He wouldn't...
  • 46:52 - 46:57
    He had medical things that he was struggling
    with, and I said, "Aaron, you know, like,
  • 46:57 - 47:01
    how does this work, like let's talk about
    it. Surely you've read the research on this
  • 47:01 - 47:05
    condition. Like, we can go through what's
    been tried...And he said, "No, I haven't read
  • 47:05 - 47:06
    any of it." Like, "I don't know anything about
    it."
  • 47:06 - 47:11
    And I said, "Aaron! You devour books! Like,
    I can see you devouring books, you've read
  • 47:11 - 47:19
    five this week. Like, you have a stack of
    academic journal articles by your bed. We're
  • 47:19 - 47:23
    talking about half of them. Why haven't you
    read anything about this condition that is
  • 47:23 - 47:28
    making your own life harder?" And he just
    said, "Well, I don't think I'm that important.
  • 47:28 - 47:34
    The world's important," like...
  • 47:34 - 47:46
    Watching that happen was hard. You struggle
    to take care of him. He also had these days
  • 47:46 - 47:51
    that were down. I mean, I guess it was a down
    day in the end that got him. In between the
  • 47:51 - 47:54
    days when he was doing amazing amounts of
    stuff. You all know how much he did.
  • 47:54 - 48:01
    He was too young to possible have done a third
    of the things he managed, and who knows what
  • 48:01 - 48:05
    he would have achieved with another 50 years.
    But in-between those days, there'd be days
  • 48:05 - 48:12
    when he was just blue. I remember I caught
    him on one of those and said, "Aaron, this
  • 48:12 - 48:16
    is amazing stuff. We can go and do it right
    now."
  • 48:16 - 48:22
    And he just said, "No, the code, it's all
    terrible, it's ugly, it's broken." I'm like,
  • 48:22 - 48:29
    "OK, let's do some science." And he'd say,
    "No, the data doesn't work, it sucks, it's
  • 48:29 - 48:37
    too hard." And I said, "Surely, there must
    be something that you'd be doing. That really
  • 48:37 - 48:45
    would feel right." And he stopped for a while
    and said, "Yes, actually. Typography."
  • 48:45 - 48:47
    [laughter]
  • 48:47 - 49:00
    I could do typography. Anyway, so he was contradictory.
    You never knew exactly what to make of him.
  • 49:00 - 49:04
    He was brilliant and sometimes and infuriating
    and wrong. Like, the Chinese room argument.
  • 49:04 - 49:12
    But then sometimes...I guess I'm talking about
    paradoxes in Aaron. Sometimes he was infuriating
  • 49:04 - 49:04
    [laughter]
  • 49:12 - 49:18
    and wrong and brilliant at the same time.
    And I have one story about a paradox. He and
  • 49:18 - 49:21
    I were talking about moral philosophy, ethical
    philosophy.
  • 49:21 - 49:26
    We were both interested in these ideas, the
    [inaudible 00: 49:23] ideas of...actually,
  • 49:26 - 49:31
    we have a responsibility to find the thing
    that we can do that makes the most difference
  • 49:31 - 49:35
    to the universe, to the world, and makes it
    better, whatever that means.
  • 49:35 - 49:43
    But I had just read a paper about a paradox
    showing that actually, if you write down all
  • 49:43 - 49:48
    of our most compelling intuitions about what
    it is for the world to be good, so that we
  • 49:48 - 49:52
    can know how to make it better. You write
    them all down, you can actually mathematically
  • 49:52 - 49:59
    prove it's a recent result, 10 years old by
    a Swedish philosopher. Our deepest intuitions
  • 49:59 - 50:04
    about this are flatly contradictory. It's
    a 'paradox. There is actually no completely
  • 50:04 - 50:10
    coherent definition of what makes the world
    better.
  • 50:10 - 50:13
    And Aaron just looked at me and said, "That's
    completely wrong." Like, "Actually, no, it's
  • 50:13 - 50:18
    this, this and this." And I said, "Aaron,
    you're arguing with a mathematical theorem.
  • 50:18 - 50:24
    I have a proof of it right here. You're not
    pointing out any flaws in the logic in this
  • 50:24 - 50:26
    paper."
  • 50:26 - 50:33
    And he said, "No, no, it's like..." Then I
    stopped and I stared at him for a while and
  • 50:33 - 50:39
    I said, "I'm not sure you're right, but actually
    maybe we can find a way out of this theorem."
  • 50:39 - 50:44
    It's not an impossibility theorem, it's not
    a paradox.
  • 50:44 - 50:49
    Actually, maybe it's more like an uncertainty
    theorem. We can rehabilitate it as a kind
  • 50:49 - 50:53
    of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle for
    morality. You can't be completely sure about
  • 50:53 - 50:58
    what's right. But you can actually pin the
    amount of uncertainty down to minimum and
  • 50:58 - 51:03
    still get the right answers to obvious moral
    dilemmas.
  • 51:03 - 51:07
    So he and I actually sat down and wrote a
    paper about this which we still haven't published.
  • 51:07 - 51:12
    I now actually have a...this is a thing I
    promised to Aaron's ghost. I'm going to finish
  • 51:12 - 51:20
    that paper and maybe people will read it.
    But he was paradoxical and yet he got so much
  • 51:20 - 51:24
    done, did so many amazing things at the same
    time.
  • 51:24 - 51:34
    There's a lot more I want to say and there
    are a lot of things that we all need to do.
  • 51:34 - 51:40
    Because Aaron's loss reminded us or pointed
    out that they needed to be done. Some of them
  • 51:40 - 51:47
    are things that matter a lot to this community
    here in this room. We need to free the literature,
  • 51:47 - 51:50
    the scientific literature, that Aaron died
    trying to free.
  • 51:50 - 51:59
    And we also need to figure out what we can
    do to fix the insane criminal justice system
  • 51:59 - 52:03
    in the United States.
  • 52:03 - 52:06
    [applause]
  • 52:06 - 52:17
    But I've said enough for tonight, and there
    other people who will take up these threads.
  • 52:17 - 52:34
    [Tim O'Reilly] I've been asked how I as a
    publisher who has an online service that puts
  • 52:34 - 52:43
    content behind a paywall could possibly be
    a support of Aaron Schwartz, this guy who
  • 52:43 - 52:53
    downloads content from services like that.
    And my answer is that we're trying to invent
  • 52:53 - 53:04
    the future, and the future does not look like
    the past. And the future is uncovered by struggle
  • 53:04 - 53:14
    to figure out what works and what doesn't
    work. And the people who figure that out are
  • 53:14 - 53:16
    people to whom we owe an enormous debt.
  • 53:16 - 53:23
    I was trying to think of, you know, past experiences
    with Aaron. When I first met him, he came
  • 53:23 - 53:31
    to our Foo Camp and our Etech Conferences.
    But what I decided to share with you is a
  • 53:31 - 53:39
    poem that I read as part of a talk that I
    gave at our Etech Conference in 2008. And
  • 53:39 - 53:46
    I checked, and just to refresh memory, Aaron
    was there.
  • 53:46 - 53:53
    The poem was part of a talk entitled, "Why
    I Love Hackers." And I started out with a
  • 53:53 - 53:59
    picture of some berries, some poisonous ones
    and some ones that were good to eat. And I
  • 53:59 - 54:04
    said, "Somewhere way back in time, somebody
    had the courage to figure out which of these
  • 54:04 - 54:14
    things were good to eat." And I talked about
    people wanting to fly, and how it was this
  • 54:14 - 54:22
    crazy dream, and eventually, we figured it
    out, and lots of other stories from the history
  • 54:22 - 54:23
    of hacking.
  • 54:23 - 54:29
    And then I ended with a poem, which seems
    singularly appropriate for Aaron because it's
  • 54:29 - 54:36
    about both the courage to try to do what hasn't
    been done, to change the world, but also how
  • 54:36 - 54:41
    hard that is, and the challenge of it. It's
    a poem called "The Man Watching," by Rainer
  • 54:41 - 54:44
    Maria Rilke, in translation by Robert Bly.
  • 54:44 - 54:51
    He said, "I can tell by the way the trees
    beat, after so many dull days on my worried
  • 54:51 - 54:58
    window panes, that a storm is coming, and
    I hear the far-off fields say things. I can't
  • 54:58 - 55:01
    bear without a friend. I can't love without
    a sister."
  • 55:01 - 55:09
    "The storm, the shifter of shapes, drives
    on across the woods and across time, and the
  • 55:09 - 55:16
    world looks as if it had no age. The landscape,
    like a line in the psalm book, is seriousness
  • 55:16 - 55:18
    and weight and eternity."
  • 55:18 - 55:27
    "What we choose to fight is so tiny. What
    fights us is so great. If only we would let
  • 55:27 - 55:33
    ourselves be dominated, as things do, by some
    immense storm. We would become strong too,
  • 55:33 - 55:35
    and not need names."
  • 55:35 - 55:43
    "When we win, it's with small things, and
    the triumph itself makes us small. What is
  • 55:43 - 55:50
    extraordinary and eternal does not want to
    be bent by us. I mean, the angel who appeared
  • 55:50 - 55:55
    to the wrestlers of the Old Testament. When
    the wrestler's sinews grew long like metal
  • 55:55 - 55:59
    strings, he felt them under his fingers like
    chords of deep music."
  • 55:59 - 56:07
    "Whoever was beaten by this angel, who often
    simply declined the fight, went away proud,
  • 56:07 - 56:13
    and strengthened, and great from that harsh
    hand, that needed him as if to change his
  • 56:13 - 56:21
    shape. Winning does not tempt that man. This
    is how he grows, by being defeated, decisively,
  • 56:21 - 56:26
    by constantly greater beings."
  • 56:26 - 56:32
    I don't know whether Aaron was defeated or
    victorious, but we are certainly shaped by
  • 56:32 - 56:38
    the hand of the things that he wrestled with.
  • 56:38 - 56:41
    [applause]
  • 56:41 - 56:56
    [Molly Shaffer Van Houweling] I didn't know
    Aaron quite as well as many who have been
  • 56:56 - 57:01
    so generous in sharing their memories. But
    as a member of the board of directors of Creative
  • 57:01 - 57:08
    Commons, I am honored to be here to convey
    CC's grief, our gratitude, and our commitment
  • 57:08 - 57:13
    to continuing to work toward the world of
    openness and sharing that Aaron worked to
  • 57:13 - 57:16
    architect for all of us.
  • 57:16 - 57:20
    Many of you recently helped us celebrate the
    tenth birth of Creative Commons, commemorating
  • 57:20 - 57:27
    the launch in December, 2002 of our first
    suite of open content licenses at the party
  • 57:27 - 57:33
    that Seth described. But of course there was
    a gestation period before the birth of CC
  • 57:33 - 57:38
    and that's when I met Aaron thanks to Lisa.
    I think he was 15 when I met him, but appeared
  • 57:38 - 57:42
    to be about 11.
  • 57:42 - 57:48
    As most of you know, Creative Commons is a
    steward of a set of public content licenses.
  • 57:48 - 57:54
    They have licensed deeds and legal code and
    RDF metadata that is designed to make the
  • 57:54 - 58:02
    license human-readable and lawyer-readable
    and machine-readable. That's the beauty of
  • 58:02 - 58:03
    the CC vision.
  • 58:03 - 58:08
    But it's also a challenge. It's a challenge
    to find any one person who can really wrap
  • 58:08 - 58:16
    their heads around and talk about this idea.
    A person who understands humans and lawyers
  • 58:16 - 58:24
    and machines. So when Lisa and I first described
    CC at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference
  • 58:24 - 58:29
    in May, 2002, we needed some help.
  • 58:29 - 58:38
    Speaking for myself, I was human and I was
    a lawyer, but I didn't read or speak machine.
  • 58:38 - 58:45
    So the idea of explaining what CC would have
    to do with HTML, XML, RDF, and the W3C terrified
  • 58:45 - 58:52
    me. So I gave a presentation in which I said
    some boring things about law and some vague
  • 58:52 - 58:59
    things about metadata. Lisa gave a demonstration
    that I think was more exciting. But when the
  • 58:59 - 59:05
    complicated questions from the audience started,
    we handed the mic down to little Aaron.
  • 59:05 - 59:13
    With some trepidation...I'd just met the kid-but
    it was an act from me of pure desperation.
  • 59:13 - 59:22
    I couldn't answer those questions about RDF,
    and I figured, well, at least he's adorable.
  • 59:22 - 59:25
    [laughter]
  • 59:25 - 59:32
    Of course, I found Aaron's notes on the presentation
    still online this afternoon. They read almost
  • 59:32 - 59:38
    like poetry. "We did the Creative Commons
    intro in the morning. Lisa forgot the VGA
  • 59:38 - 59:44
    dongle for her iBook, so I donated mine instead.
    Whole thing seemed to go over pretty well.
  • 59:44 - 59:47
    I answered a couple of questions at the end."
  • 59:47 - 59:53
    I think Aaron answered all of the questions,
    and I was wrong to be nervous about it. Of
  • 59:53 - 60:00
    course he could answer the questions and delight
    the audience, not with his adorableness, not
  • 60:00 - 60:08
    only that, with his vision and with his ability
    to communicate it to all of us.
  • 60:08 - 60:13
    We were finally hearing from someone who could
    explain to humans, and even to lawyers, how
  • 60:13 - 60:22
    to harness the power of machines to overcome
    unnecessary limits on sharing. Aaron's vision,
  • 60:22 - 60:29
    more powerful than I could explain or even
    comprehend, how to harness the power of machines
  • 60:29 - 60:34
    to overcome unnecessary limits on sharing.
  • 60:34 - 60:39
    It was a vision Aaron pursued for CC, but
    far beyond CC as well, as many of you can
  • 60:39 - 60:48
    attest better than I, but Aaron was not a
    machine, and he was not a lawyer. He was a
  • 60:48 - 60:57
    human, and tragically mortal, but his vision
    was not. The answers he gave to our questions
  • 60:57 - 60:59
    were not.
  • 60:59 - 61:05
    He shared them, and so we still have them,
    and the people in this room are dedicated
  • 61:05 - 61:11
    to sharing them forward, and to making the
    machines for sharing them forward work better
  • 61:11 - 61:18
    and better, and to making the law for sharing
    them forward work better and better.
  • 61:18 - 61:24
    I want to end with something else that Aaron
    shared. It's just a casual email to a W3C
  • 61:24 - 61:31
    list from August 2002. To me, it captures
    his brilliance, his gift for communicating,
  • 61:31 - 61:35
    his vision of sharing, and his generous spirit.
  • 61:35 - 61:43
    "Hi there. If you haven't already heard, Creative
    Commons is a new nonprofit organization working
  • 61:43 - 61:47
    to make it easier for copyright holders to
    share their work by dedicating to the public
  • 61:47 - 61:53
    domain, or licensing it to the public on generous
    terms. As part of that effort, we've been
  • 61:53 - 61:57
    working hard to develop our licenses and metadata
    strategy over the past few months."
  • 61:57 - 62:02
    "When we launch our site, we want to not only
    give our users licenses, but also a sample
  • 62:02 - 62:06
    of RDF that they can add to their web page.
    We're hoping that by spreading these chunks
  • 62:06 - 62:12
    of RDF around the web, we'll provide a useful
    base that interesting projects and applications
  • 62:12 - 62:15
    can exploit. For more information, please
    check out our website."
  • 62:15 - 62:20
    "We'd appreciate your comments, thoughts,
    and code. Please send them to the cc-metadata
  • 62:20 - 62:27
    mailing list. We'll be monitoring the list
    and responding to your questions. Thanks.
  • 62:27 - 62:28
    Aaron."
  • 62:28 - 62:35
    "We'll be monitoring the list and responding
    to your questions." I hope that, somehow,
  • 62:35 - 62:40
    Aaron is monitoring this list.
  • 62:40 - 62:43
    [applause]
  • 62:43 - 62:49
    I hope we return to his words and his vision
    to help answer our questions, and that we
  • 62:49 - 63:01
    share those answers with our fellow humans.
    To Aaron, thank you. Thank you for sharing.
  • 63:01 - 63:05
    [applause]
  • 63:05 - 63:18
    [Alex Stamos] Unlike a lot of the people here,
    I didn't know Aaron. I never met him, didn't
  • 63:18 - 63:22
    speak to him on the phone, never even got
    to exchange emails with him, which, ironically,
  • 63:22 - 63:25
    is why I'm here.
  • 63:25 - 63:29
    The fact that I didn't know him is the reason
    why I was going to be the person that was
  • 63:29 - 63:36
    put forth to objectively explain to the jury
    of what Aaron did, and I think I was able
  • 63:36 - 63:41
    to hold onto that objectivity until the last
    week and a half, and per Teran's comments,
  • 63:41 - 63:45
    I've perhaps become much more radical than
    I was before, which you can tell, because
  • 63:45 - 63:49
    I'm wearing my radical tie today.
  • 63:49 - 63:52
    [laughter]
  • 63:52 - 63:57
    What we were going to do is...I was objectively
    going to go in front of that jury, and explain
  • 63:57 - 64:02
    to them that these horrible hacking crimes
    that Aaron was accused of is functionally
  • 64:02 - 64:08
    the same as putting in the incorrect email
    address to an airport WiFi, or going down
  • 64:08 - 64:12
    the street to Starbucks to change your IP
    address.
  • 64:12 - 64:18
    Dan Purcell was going to get up there and
    grill MIT and JSTOR witnesses, and talk to
  • 64:18 - 64:22
    them about how this kind of thing happens
    dozens and dozens of times a year at MIT,
  • 64:22 - 64:28
    and yet Aaron is the first person to ever
    have the Secret Service get involved. That
  • 64:28 - 64:31
    JSTOR witness was going to talk about how,
    "Oh, there wasn't really any damage. We were
  • 64:31 - 64:36
    a little ticked off, but this isn't a big
    deal for us, and we don't want this to happen."
  • 64:36 - 64:41
    Then Elliot Peters was going to get up and
    give this fiery defense attorney speech, pounding
  • 64:41 - 64:47
    the table, and pointing to Boston Harbor,
    and invoking the American Revolution, and
  • 64:47 - 64:53
    the spirit of freedom, and how Aaron lives
    up to the greatest ideals in our founding
  • 64:53 - 64:54
    documents.
  • 64:54 - 64:59
    Then Aaron's future was going to be in the
    hands of 12 normal people, I mean, normal
  • 64:59 - 65:04
    people who couldn't get out of jury duty,
    but hopefully people who, I think, would have
  • 65:04 - 65:12
    had the sense to understand that there is
    a huge chasm between the way Aaron was being
  • 65:12 - 65:17
    portrayed by the government and the young
    man who was sitting there at that table.
  • 65:17 - 65:21
    I had faith in them, and we're not going to
    get that chance to do all those things, and
  • 65:21 - 65:27
    we can't help Aaron anymore, but I think we,
    and by "we," I mean everybody who is listening
  • 65:27 - 65:33
    to this, we can help the next Aaron, and we
    didn't have to wait very long for the next
  • 65:33 - 65:33
    Aaron.
  • 65:33 - 65:39
    The next Aaron is the Chinese-American man
    who is accused of stealing source code from
  • 65:39 - 65:45
    a hedge fund, and is being prosecuted under
    the Espionage Act. The next Aaron is the Canadian
  • 65:45 - 65:51
    student who was expelled from his university
    for pointing out security flaws to the university
  • 65:51 - 65:54
    in their software that exposed his personal
    information.
  • 65:54 - 65:59
    The next Aaron is going to be that young lady
    whose DEFCON speech is interrupted by the
  • 65:59 - 66:07
    clink of handcuffs, or that grandfather who
    is mystified by the demand for $50,000 to
  • 66:07 - 66:11
    pay for copyright violations, because his
    next door neighbor uses open WiFi to do a
  • 66:11 - 66:16
    little BitTorrent. Those are the next Aarons,
    and those are the people we can help.
  • 66:16 - 66:20
    One of the reasons, I think we really to need
    help them is, while I think all of us feel
  • 66:20 - 66:29
    gratified about the outpouring of love and
    care, and the feeling of momentum that has
  • 66:29 - 66:32
    come out of the last week and a half.
  • 66:32 - 66:38
    We also have to be really aware that we want,
    that when people face the same kind of odds
  • 66:38 - 66:45
    that Aaron faced, many of them without Aaron's
    resources, that we want them not to think
  • 66:45 - 66:49
    Aaron's final moments of weakness and doubt
    to be the kind of thing that they need to
  • 66:49 - 66:52
    do to bring about change.
  • 66:52 - 66:54
    There are two things we need to do for that.
    One...
  • 66:54 - 66:54
    [applause]
  • 66:54 - 67:04
    One, we need to give those people as much
    as much support as Aaron was able to give.
  • 67:04 - 67:12
    Those people don't know Larry Lessig. They
    don't hang out with MIT professors, yet they
  • 67:12 - 67:16
    need the kind of support that Aaron was able
    to muster.
  • 67:16 - 67:20
    One of the things I realized through this
    whole thing is we never considered computer
  • 67:20 - 67:27
    science to be the kind of thing that is a
    profession that changes lives, and something
  • 67:27 - 67:31
    this has demonstrated is that being able to
    make an argument of whether a MAC address
  • 67:31 - 67:37
    is just something that you use to keep collisions
    from happening on a network, it is not equivalent
  • 67:37 - 67:39
    to the serial number on a gun.
  • 67:39 - 67:44
    Making that argument is the kind of thing
    that can mean spending decades in prison.
  • 67:44 - 67:49
    There are other professions that are life-changing,
    medicine and law, and in those professions,
  • 67:49 - 67:54
    people have an idea about equal access and
    helping people, and that doesn't happen in
  • 67:54 - 67:56
    reality, but at least they try.
  • 67:56 - 67:59
    There's an idea that everybody has a defense
    lawyer. There's an idea that you can go and
  • 67:59 - 68:03
    get treated by a doctor, and they have an
    ethical obligation to you. I think those of
  • 68:03 - 68:09
    us in the computer world need to see, via
    Aaron's tragedy, that we have the same kind
  • 68:09 - 68:11
    of obligation.
  • 68:11 - 68:13
    [applause]
  • 68:13 - 68:20
    The second thing we all need to do is when
    we are up here speaking, or we're commenting
  • 68:20 - 68:27
    on Reddit, or Hacker News, or talking to people
    about Aaron, while we talk about the positive
  • 68:27 - 68:34
    change that is going to come out of his death,
    we have to make it clear that all of those
  • 68:34 - 68:38
    positive things pale in comparison to what
    he would've done had he lived.
  • 68:38 - 68:39
    [applause]
  • 68:39 - 68:45
    That's an important part of the message, because
    we don't want those young people to think
  • 68:45 - 68:51
    that their only way out is to sacrifice themselves,
    that they deserve to live too, and that they
  • 68:51 - 68:58
    have people who are standing behind them.
    Thank you.
  • 68:58 - 69:00
    [applause]
  • 69:00 - 69:14
    [Cindy Cohn] Good evening. Thank you everybody.
    We're all starting with how we met Aaron.
  • 69:14 - 69:18
    I think I met Aaron before this, but my first
    real memory of him is on the steps of the
  • 69:18 - 69:25
    United States Supreme Court on the night before
    the Eldred argument in 2002. I remember thinking,
  • 69:25 - 69:29
    "Does your mother know you're here?"
  • 69:29 - 69:34
    I recently found his account of that night,
    and it reminded me of how very young he was,
  • 69:34 - 69:39
    how excited he was to be at the court, and
    yet, his understanding of the nuances of the
  • 69:39 - 69:46
    Copyright Term Extension Act were better than
    mine at that time. I also realized that by
  • 69:46 - 69:52
    having our first...or least, the first I'd
    met, really, Fanboy, that we were building
  • 69:52 - 69:55
    a movement.
  • 69:55 - 70:01
    Since the early morning of January 12th, when
    I learned that Aaron had passed away, I feel
  • 70:01 - 70:07
    like I've had a little Aaron on my shoulder,
    reminding me that we are still part of a movement,
  • 70:07 - 70:13
    and demanding that we push forward, push further,
    and that the tragedy of his death be parts
  • 70:13 - 70:17
    of the roots of something good and something
    better.
  • 70:17 - 70:24
    I don't think Aaron named his organization
    Demand Progress by accident. At EFF, we feel
  • 70:24 - 70:29
    this intensely, and I think we feel it in
    two directions. First, we feel the need to
  • 70:29 - 70:34
    continue his work, opening access to publicly
    funded and public domain information for all
  • 70:34 - 70:39
    people, so that you don't have to be in an
    ivory tower to learn.
  • 70:39 - 70:40
    [applause]
  • 70:40 - 70:49
    The second, though, is the one that I've spent
    most of my time on for the last few weeks,
  • 70:49 - 70:54
    and that was number four on Taren's list,
    which is trying to fix the Computer Fraud
  • 70:54 - 70:56
    and Abuse Act.
  • 70:56 - 71:01
    EFF has a draft of some modest fixes that
    would reduce the ability of prosecutors to
  • 71:01 - 71:07
    use the CFAA, and similar computer laws, to
    ratchet up threats on people like Aaron. It's
  • 71:07 - 71:10
    on our website. It's on Reddit.
  • 71:10 - 71:14
    Representative Zoe Lofgren, as many of you
    know, had led the way, and remains willing
  • 71:14 - 71:22
    to help, but we have to create the space for
    real change, not not-real change, and that
  • 71:22 - 71:26
    remains to be done. Her initial proposals
    are not sufficient.
  • 71:26 - 71:32
    We have a lot of work to do to get this where
    it will be, but we need to ensure that what
  • 71:32 - 71:37
    happened to Aaron never happens to another
    bright, idealistic, geeky kid who wants to
  • 71:37 - 71:41
    make the world a better place, and if we can't
    do it in Congress, then we need to do it in
  • 71:41 - 71:49
    the courts, but we need your help. In fact,
    we need the help of everyone you all know.
  • 71:49 - 71:53
    We need to marshal the same sort of support
    for this fight that we were able to marshal
  • 71:53 - 71:59
    with SOPA about SOPA and PIPA, and maybe even
    more, since this involves not just Hollywood,
  • 71:59 - 72:06
    but federal power, and we won't have Aaron.
  • 72:06 - 72:11
    I was hesitant to make this bold pitch at
    Aaron's memorial, but honestly, I don't think
  • 72:11 - 72:16
    Aaron would've forgiven me if I didn't. We
    can't help Aaron directly anymore, but we
  • 72:16 - 72:21
    can help the next Aaron, and the one after
    that, and all of us who would be the beneficiaries
  • 72:21 - 72:27
    of what those next Aarons will create for
    us, and the knowledge that they will make
  • 72:27 - 72:32
    available to all the rest of us and all the
    people around the world.
  • 72:32 - 72:39
    I think we built the movement that I first
    saw by seeing the little fanboy, Aaron Swartz,
  • 72:39 - 72:46
    in 2002, so now, let's use it.
  • 72:46 - 72:50
    [applause]
  • 72:50 - 73:06
    [Brewster Kahle] Wow. I learned from Aaron
    what living an open source life was like.
  • 73:06 - 73:15
    I think he really live that way. He floated
    and helped others. He gave everything away.
  • 73:15 - 73:23
    He really wasn't tied to an institution. He
    really was not a company man in any sense.
  • 73:23 - 73:31
    He was really quite pure in his motivations,
    and it made him incredibly effective of cutting
  • 73:31 - 73:39
    through a lot of the stuff that most of us
    deal with, an open source life. He was able
  • 73:39 - 73:46
    to keep his self-interests at bay, which is
    kind of remarkable for a lot of us, but he
  • 73:46 - 73:55
    was able to do it, and he was able to communicate
    well with an open smile and a kind heart.
  • 73:55 - 74:04
    He had a way of spending time, and his energy,
    on things that mattered, and he had a genius
  • 74:04 - 74:10
    at finding things that mattered to millions
    of people. There are lots of things to work
  • 74:10 - 74:14
    on, but the things that he worked on were
    incredibly effective.
  • 74:14 - 74:25
    We first met, I think, in 2002, at the Eldred
    Supreme Court case in Washington, DC, when
  • 74:25 - 74:30
    we drove a bookmobile across, celebrating
    the public domain by giving away books that
  • 74:30 - 74:36
    kids made, and also, then, at the Creative
    Commons launch.
  • 74:36 - 74:41
    I really got to know Aaron when he said, "I'd
    really like to help make the Open Library
  • 74:41 - 74:49
    website with the Internet Archive, to go and
    give books, and integrate books into the Internet
  • 74:49 - 74:56
    itself." He said, "I've got this cool technology
    called Infogami. It made possible to make
  • 74:56 - 75:01
    Reddit happen. Let's use it again for this
    other thing."
  • 75:01 - 75:06
    It was wonderful to work with him, but it
    was really unlike working with anybody else
  • 75:06 - 75:13
    I've ever met. You certainly couldn't tell
    him what to do. He just did what was the right
  • 75:13 - 75:20
    thing to do, and he was right, certainly,
    a lot more often than I was.
  • 75:20 - 75:26
    We worked together in other areas when he
    was a champion of open access, especially
  • 75:26 - 75:32
    of the public domain, bringing public access
    to the public domain. Most people think that's
  • 75:32 - 75:38
    kind of an obvious thing. "Isn't the public
    thing mean that it's publicly accessible?"
  • 75:38 - 75:40
    Of course, all of us are like, "No."
  • 75:40 - 75:47
    It's sort of like there are these national
    parks with moats, and walls, and guns, and
  • 75:47 - 75:53
    turrets pointing out in case somebody might
    want to come near the public domain, and Aaron
  • 75:53 - 76:00
    didn't think this was right, and he spent
    a lot of time and effort freeing these materials.
  • 76:00 - 76:05
    One of the first ones that we were actively
    working together on was freeing government
  • 76:05 - 76:11
    court cases, so that anybody could see this
    without having to have special privilege or
  • 76:11 - 76:15
    money, and also, to make it so you could data
    mine it, and go and look at these things in
  • 76:15 - 76:18
    a very different way.
  • 76:18 - 76:26
    He freed and liberated a lot of court cases
    from the PACER system, and uploaded them in-bulk
  • 76:26 - 76:31
    to the Internet Archive, so that people could
    have access to these. There are now four million
  • 76:31 - 76:38
    documents from 800,000 cases that have been
    used by six million people because of the
  • 76:38 - 76:43
    project that Aaron Swartz and others helped
    start.
  • 76:43 - 76:46
    [applause]
  • 76:46 - 76:53
    It was an interesting project because it went
    over many different organizations, each playing
  • 76:53 - 77:02
    a role, and all cooperating in a very non-corporate
    way. It was a very Aaron style way of making
  • 77:02 - 77:07
    things happen, and the idea of making court
    documents and legal documents available more
  • 77:07 - 77:14
    easily struck a chord with me, because in
    college, I was trying to figure out how I
  • 77:14 - 77:17
    was going to try to get out of the draft.
  • 77:17 - 77:26
    My college didn't have a legal collection,
    and the only way I could try to get to legal
  • 77:26 - 77:35
    court documents was to get an ID from my professor
    and break into the Harvard Law Library to
  • 77:35 - 77:38
    go and read court documents.
  • 77:38 - 77:41
    [applause]
  • 77:41 - 77:49
    That sucked. It really makes no sense, and
    Aaron not only saw that it doesn't make sense,
  • 77:49 - 77:58
    he decided he was going to try to help solve
    this, not just for himself, but for everyone.
  • 77:58 - 78:01
    Then there were other public domain collections,
    like the Google Books collection.
  • 78:01 - 78:08
    Google Books was a library project to go and
    digitize lots and lots of books. A lot of
  • 78:08 - 78:14
    them were public domain. Google would make
    them available from their website, but really,
  • 78:14 - 78:19
    really painfully. It would make it so that
    if you wanted one book, you could get one
  • 78:19 - 78:26
    book. If you wanted 100 books, they'd turn
    off your IP address forever.
  • 78:26 - 78:32
    This is no way to have public access to the
    public domain. The Internet Archive started
  • 78:32 - 78:42
    getting these uploads of Google Books, going
    faster, and faster, and faster. It was like,
  • 78:42 - 78:49
    "Well, where are these coming from?" Well,
    it turns out, it's Aaron.
  • 78:49 - 78:52
    He and a bunch of friends figured out that
    they could go and get a bunch of computers
  • 78:52 - 79:01
    to go slowly enough to just clock through
    tons of Google Books and upload them to the
  • 79:01 - 79:06
    Internet Archive. Interestingly, Google never
    got upset about it. The libraries, on the
  • 79:06 - 79:11
    other hand, grumbled. Anyway, they'll get
    over it.
  • 79:11 - 79:12
    [laughter]
  • 79:12 - 79:19
    When this started happening, we said, "OK,
    what's going on? Should we be concerned?"
  • 79:19 - 79:25
    "No, it's public domain. We just made sure
    that we got the cataloging data right, and
  • 79:25 - 79:28
    we linked back to Google, so that if you're
    on the book, you can go back to the original
  • 79:28 - 79:37
    page and see..." It all worked well, but there
    was Aaron doing it again, bringing public
  • 79:37 - 79:40
    access to the public domain.
  • 79:40 - 79:49
    What is crushing to me is that Aaron got ensnared
    by the Federal Government for doing something
  • 79:49 - 79:56
    that the Internet Archive actively encourages
    others to do for our collections, and we think
  • 79:56 - 80:04
    all libraries should encourage, which is bulk
    downloading to support data mining and other
  • 80:04 - 80:13
    research using computers. This is just the
    way the world works.
  • 80:13 - 80:16
    [applause]
  • 80:16 - 80:22
    The first step is, for a computer to read
    and analyze materials, to download a set of
  • 80:22 - 80:32
    documents. When Aaron did this from one library,
    JSTOR, they strongly objected, and demanded
  • 80:32 - 80:39
    that MIT find and stop that user, which then
    led US prosecutors to pull out their worst
  • 80:39 - 80:41
    techniques.
  • 80:41 - 80:50
    Did anybody stop to ask if bulk downloading
    is a crime? I say, "No." Bulk downloading
  • 80:50 - 81:01
    is not in itself a crime. Let's stop this
    practice of discouraging bulk downloading
  • 81:01 - 81:07
    because there are encouraging projects that
    are learning amazing new things by having
  • 81:07 - 81:14
    computers be part of the research process.
    Let's not stop this, and discourage young
  • 81:14 - 81:22
    people from coming up with new and different
    ways to make access, to learn things from
  • 81:22 - 81:25
    our libraries.
  • 81:25 - 81:35
    What resulted, in this case, was tragic and
    not necessary. Really, what we want is computers
  • 81:35 - 81:43
    to be able to read. Aaron knew this, we were
    all building this, and he got ensnared anyway.
  • 81:43 - 81:47
    Let's let our computers read.
  • 81:47 - 81:54
    Because of this tragedy, JSTOR, I talked to
    this morning, and the Internet Archive have
  • 81:54 - 82:00
    agreed to meet to discuss the broad issue
    of data mining and web crawling. I hope that
  • 82:00 - 82:07
    we really make progress. At least there are
    reasons to be positive.
  • 82:07 - 82:16
    This assault on Aaron would disillusion, discourage,
    and depress a principled young man, and if
  • 82:16 - 82:24
    there ever was a principled young man, it
    was Aaron Swartz. We miss you, and we will
  • 82:24 - 82:30
    carry on your important work.
  • 82:30 - 82:33
    [applause]
  • 82:33 - 82:47
    [Carl Malamud] Do not. Do not think for a
    moment. Do not think for a moment, that Aaron's
  • 82:47 - 82:52
    work on JSTOR was a random act of a lone hacker,
    some kind of crazy, spur-of-the-moment bulk
  • 82:52 - 82:59
    download. JSTOR had long come in for withering
    criticism from the net.
  • 82:59 - 83:04
    Larry Lessig called JSTOR a moral outrage
    in a talk, and I suppose I have to confess
  • 83:04 - 83:12
    he was quoting me, and we weren't the only
    ones fanning those flames. Sequestering knowledge
  • 83:12 - 83:19
    behind pay walls, making scientific journals,
    only available to a few kids fortunate enough
  • 83:19 - 83:25
    to be at fancy universities, and charging
    $20 an article for the remaining 99 percent
  • 83:25 - 83:28
    of us, was a festering wound.
  • 83:28 - 83:34
    It offended many people. It embarrassed many
    who wrote those articles, that their work
  • 83:34 - 83:42
    had become somebody's profit margin, a members-only
    country club of knowledge. Many of us helped
  • 83:42 - 83:49
    fan those flames, and many of us feel guilty
    today for fanning those flames, but JSTOR
  • 83:49 - 83:51
    was just one of many battles.
  • 83:51 - 83:56
    They tried to paint Aaron as some kind of
    lone wolf hacker, a young terrorist who went
  • 83:56 - 84:05
    on a crazy IP killing spree that caused $92
    million in damages, but Aaron wasn't a lone
  • 84:05 - 84:11
    wolf. He was part of an army, and I had the
    honor of serving with him for a decade. You've
  • 84:11 - 84:19
    heard many things about his remarkable life,
    but I want to focus tonight on just one.
  • 84:19 - 84:25
    Aaron was part of an army of citizens that
    believes democracy only works when a citizenry
  • 84:25 - 84:30
    are informed, and we know about our rights
    and our obligations, an army that believes
  • 84:30 - 84:37
    we must make justice and knowledge available
    to all, not just the well-born, or those that
  • 84:37 - 84:42
    have grabbed the reins of power, so that we
    may govern ourselves more wisely.
  • 84:42 - 84:49
    He was part of an army of citizens that rejects
    kings and generals and believes in rough consensus
  • 84:49 - 84:54
    and running code.
  • 84:54 - 84:58
    [applause]
  • 84:58 - 85:05
    We worked together on a dozen government databases.
    When we worked o something, the decisions
  • 85:05 - 85:11
    weren't rash. Our work often took months,
    sometimes years, sometimes a decade, and Aaron
  • 85:11 - 85:19
    Swartz did not get his proper serving of decades.
    We looked at and poked at the US copyright
  • 85:19 - 85:27
    database for a long time. It was a system
    so old it was still running [inaudible 01:
  • 85:27 - 85:28
    25:25] .
  • 85:28 - 85:29
    [laughter]
  • 85:29 - 85:35
    The government had, believe it or not, asserted
    copyright on the copyright database. Now how
  • 85:35 - 85:43
    you copyright a database that is specifically
    called out in the United States Constitution
  • 85:43 - 85:49
    is beyond me. But we knew we were playing
    with fire by violating their terms of use.
  • 85:49 - 85:55
    So we were careful. We grabbed that data and
    it was used to feed the Open Library here
  • 85:55 - 86:00
    at the Internet Archive, and it was used to
    feed Google Books, and we got a letter from
  • 86:00 - 86:06
    the Copyright Office waving copyright on that
    copyright database.
  • 86:06 - 86:11
    But before we did that, we had to talk to
    many lawyers and worry about the government
  • 86:11 - 86:16
    hauling us in for malicious, pre-meditated
    bulk downloading.
  • 86:16 - 86:17
    [laughter]
  • 86:17 - 86:23
    These were not random acts of aggression.
    We worked on databases to make them better,
  • 86:23 - 86:29
    to make our democracy work better, to help
    our government. We were not criminals. When
  • 86:29 - 86:36
    we brought in 20 million pages of US District
    Court documents from behind their eight-cent-per-page
  • 86:36 - 86:43
    PACER paywall, we found those public filings
    infested with privacy violations.
  • 86:43 - 86:50
    Names of minor children, names of informants,
    medical records, mental health records, financial
  • 86:50 - 86:57
    records, and tens of thousands of Social Security
    numbers. We were whistleblowers, and we sent
  • 86:57 - 87:03
    our results to the chief judges of 31 District
    Courts. And those judges were shocked and
  • 87:03 - 87:08
    dismayed, and then redacted those documents,
    and they yelled at the lawyers that filed
  • 87:08 - 87:12
    them, and the Judicial Conference changed
    their privacy rules.
  • 87:12 - 87:12
    [applause]
  • 87:12 - 87:19
    But you know what the bureaucrats did? You
    know what the bureaucrats did who ran the
  • 87:19 - 87:24
    Administrative Office of the United States
    Courts? To them, weren't citizens that made
  • 87:24 - 87:32
    public data better. We were thieves that took
    $1.6 million of their property. So they called
  • 87:32 - 87:38
    the FBI. They said they were hacked by criminals,
    an organized gang that was imperiling their
  • 87:38 - 87:47
    $120 million per year revenue stream selling
    public government documents.
  • 87:47 - 87:53
    The FBI sat outside Aaron's house. They called
    him up, and tried to sucker him into meeting
  • 87:53 - 87:59
    them without his lawyer. The FBI sat two armed
    agents down in an interrogation room with
  • 87:59 - 88:03
    me to get to the bottom of this alleged conspiracy.
  • 88:03 - 88:10
    But we weren't criminals! We were only citizens.
    We did nothing wrong. They found nothing wrong.
  • 88:10 - 88:16
    We did our duty as citizens and the government
    investigation had nothing to show for it but
  • 88:16 - 88:19
    a waste of a whole lot of time and money.
  • 88:19 - 88:27
    If you want a chilling effect, sit somebody
    down with a couple FBI agents for a while
  • 88:27 - 88:33
    and see how quickly their blood runs cold.
    There are people who face danger every day
  • 88:33 - 88:39
    to protect us, police officers, and firefighters,
    and emergency workers, and I am grateful and
  • 88:39 - 88:45
    amazed by what they do, but the work that
    people like Aaron and I did, slinging DVDs
  • 88:45 - 88:51
    and running shell scripts on public materials,
    should not be a dangerous profession.
  • 88:51 - 88:59
    We weren't criminals, but there were crimes
    committed, crimes against the very idea of
  • 88:59 - 89:06
    justice. When the US attorney told Aaron he
    had to plead guilty to 13 felonies for attempting
  • 89:06 - 89:13
    to propagate knowledge before she'd even consider
    a deal, that was an abuse of power, a misuse
  • 89:13 - 89:15
    of the criminal justice system.
  • 89:15 - 89:16
    [applause]
  • 89:16 - 89:25
    That was a crime against justice, and that
    US attorney does not act alone. She is part
  • 89:25 - 89:33
    of a posse intent on protecting property,
    not people. All over the United States, those
  • 89:33 - 89:39
    without access to means don't have access
    to justice, and face these abuses of power
  • 89:39 - 89:40
    every day.
  • 89:40 - 89:47
    It was a crime against learning when a nonprofit
    corporation like JSTOR charged with advancing
  • 89:47 - 89:55
    knowledge, turned a download, that caused
    no harm and no damage, into a $92 million
  • 89:55 - 90:01
    federal case, and the JSTOR corporate monopoly
    on knowledge is not alone.
  • 90:01 - 90:08
    All over the United States, corporations have
    staked their fences on the field of education,
  • 90:08 - 90:14
    for-profited colleges that steal from our
    veterans, nonprofit standard bodies that ration
  • 90:14 - 90:20
    public safety codes while paying million dollar
    salaries, multinational conglomerates that
  • 90:20 - 90:26
    measure the work of scientific papers and
    legal materials by their gross margins.
  • 90:26 - 90:28
    [applause]
  • 90:28 - 90:36
    In the JSTOR case, was the overly aggressive
    posture of the department of justice, prosecutors,
  • 90:36 - 90:41
    and law enforcement officials revenge, because
    they were embarrassed that, in their view
  • 90:41 - 90:45
    at least, we somehow got away with something
    in the PACER incident?
  • 90:45 - 90:51
    Was the merciless JSTOR prosecution the revenge
    of embarrassed bureaucrats because they looked
  • 90:51 - 90:57
    stupid in the "New York Times," because the
    United States Senate called them on the carpet?
  • 90:57 - 91:03
    We will probably never know the answer to
    that question, but it sure looks like they
  • 91:03 - 91:10
    destroyed a young man's life in a petty abuse
    of power. This was not a criminal matter.
  • 91:10 - 91:12
    Aaron was not a criminal.
  • 91:12 - 91:18
    If you think you own something, and I think
    that thing is public, I'm more than happy
  • 91:18 - 91:22
    to meet you in a court of law, and if you're
    right, I'll take my lumps if I've wronged
  • 91:22 - 91:29
    you, but when we turn armed agents of the
    law on citizens trying to increase access
  • 91:29 - 91:35
    to knowledge, we've broken the rule of law.
    We've desecrated the temple of justice. Aaron
  • 91:35 - 91:37
    Swartz was not a criminal.
  • 91:37 - 91:39
    [applause]
  • 91:39 - 91:50
    Aaron Swartz was a citizen, and he was a brave
    soldier in a war which continues today, a
  • 91:50 - 91:56
    war in which corrupt and venal profiteers
    try to steal, and horde, and starve our public
  • 91:56 - 91:59
    domain for their own private gain.
  • 91:59 - 92:04
    When people try to restrict access to the
    law, or they try to collect tolls on the road
  • 92:04 - 92:11
    to knowledge, or deny education to those without
    means, those people are the ones who should
  • 92:11 - 92:20
    not face a stern gaze of an outraged public
    prosecutor. What the Department of Justice
  • 92:20 - 92:25
    put Aaron through for trying to make our world
    better is the same thing they can put you
  • 92:25 - 92:25
    through.
  • 92:25 - 92:31
    Our army isn't one lone wolf. It is thousands
    of citizens, many of you in this room, who
  • 92:31 - 92:37
    are fighting for justice and knowledge. I
    say we are an army, and I use the word with
  • 92:37 - 92:43
    cause, because we face people who want to
    imprison us for downloading a database to
  • 92:43 - 92:48
    take a closer look. We face people who believe
    they can tell us what we can read and what
  • 92:48 - 92:50
    we can say.
  • 92:50 - 92:57
    But when I see our army, I see an army that
    creates instead of destroys. I see the army
  • 92:57 - 93:03
    of Mahatma Gandhi walking peacefully to the
    sea to make salt for the people. I see the
  • 93:03 - 93:09
    army of Martin Luther King walking peacefully
    but with determination to Washington to demand
  • 93:09 - 93:15
    their rights. Because change does not roll
    in on the wheels of inevitability, it comes
  • 93:15 - 93:20
    through continuous struggle.
  • 93:20 - 93:24
    [applause]
  • 93:24 - 93:31
    When I see our army, I see an army that creates
    new opportunities for the poor. An army that
  • 93:31 - 93:37
    makes our society more just and more fair.
    An army that makes knowledge universal. When
  • 93:37 - 93:44
    I see our army, I see the people who have
    created the Wikipedia and the Internet Archive,
  • 93:44 - 93:50
    the people who coded GNU and Apache and BIND
    and Linux, I see the people who made the EFF
  • 93:50 - 93:55
    and the Creative Commons. I see the people
    who created our Internet as a gift to the
  • 93:55 - 93:57
    world.
  • 93:57 - 94:03
    When I see our army, I see Aaron Schwartz,
    and my heart is broken. We've truly lost one
  • 94:03 - 94:10
    of our better angels. I wish we could change
    the past, but we cannot. But we can change
  • 94:10 - 94:16
    the future and we must. We must do so for
    Aaron. We must do so for ourselves. We must
  • 94:16 - 94:22
    do so to make our world a better place, a
    more humane place, a place where justice works
  • 94:22 - 94:26
    and access to knowledge becomes a human right.
    Thank you.
  • 94:26 -
    [applause]
Title:
Aaron Swartz Memorial at the Internet Archive
Description:

A gathering to remember Aaron Swartz on the evening of Thursday, January 24th.

aaron swartz
november 8, 1986 -- january 11, 2013

memorial program

part 1

speakers:

danny o'brien
taren stinebrickner-kauffman
lisa rein
seth schoen
peter eckersley
tim o'reilly
molly shaffer van houweling
alex stamos
cindy cohn
brewster kahle
carl malamud

part 2, open microphone, will be posted shortly

more » « less
Team:
Captions Requested
Duration:
01:34:41
Amara Bot edited English subtitles for Aaron Swartz Memorial at the Internet Archive
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