• @[email protected]
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    693 days ago

    why are people still gobsmacked that laws don’t apply to the owner class, only the peasant class

    it’s been this way for thousands of years

    everyone in this particular com knows the solution so i don’t have to break the rules and spell it out, but it’s the only solution

    • @[email protected]
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      242 days ago

      Just so you know, you don’t have to be surprised by an event to post about it. But not posting about it doesn’t keep it in peoples’ mind, so that’s why these get posted. Plus, there’s always going to be a couple of the lucky 10k that see this for the first time and finally wake up to that fact.

  • TomMasz
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    273 days ago

    This changed a lot of people’s perception of MIT, and not for the better.

    • @NABDad
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      73 days ago

      Did that have any noticeable effect on the policies or behavior of MIT?

      • TomMasz
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        62 days ago

        MIT didn’t seem to think it did anything wrong and considered the school to be a neutral participant. I’ve seen nothing since that would indicate they accept any blame.

  • @conicalscientist
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    92 days ago

    I had a bad feeling when tech was turning out more like Zuckerberg and less like the Swartz. I didn’t think they’d go full dystopia.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    Aaron should have thought to start a trillion dollar multinational first – then those laws that persecuted him would have just been a formality he could buy his way out of.

  • @Scolding7300
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    22 days ago

    The article seems to focus on the seeding part, i.e. distribution, but not the downloading part. Isn’t downloading part illegal too? Or did they buy all those books?

    • @FlexibleToast
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      52 days ago

      Historically, the legal system is much more concerned with the distribution, not the downloading.

  • TAG
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    -82 days ago

    Different crimes. Swartz was charged with breaking into the MIT network and destroying it, because he connected to their guest Wi-Fi and used (way) too much bandwidth. From what I heard, both the copyright holder and prosecutor only wanted to give him a slap on the wrist and firm talking to. It was MIT network support/campus police that insisted on accusing him of every crime possible.

    If you want a better case to compare it to, cite the cases brought by Metallica saying that their album did not sell 10 billion copies because a single mother listened to it without paying.

    • @nop
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      72 days ago

      Aaron Swartz was charged with a multitude of criminal counts well beyond breaking MITs network. Wikipedia article has more details and the references to back it up.

    • @AngryCommieKender
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      52 days ago

      MIT didn’t even want more than a slap on the wrist. He was literally one of their “golden boys.” The FBI agents wanted to make an example, and pad their careers.