Sample papers Swartz attempted to set free include "John Berryman: The Poetics of Martyrdom" and "Mapping the Niger, 1798-1832: Trust, Testimony and 'Ocular Demonstration' in the Late Enlightenment." On its own initiative, JSTOR, which hosts the academic papers and never pressed charges against Swartz, started offering limited free access to its archive just this week.
Two years ago, in January, 2011,
Swartz was arrested for, essentially, setting information free - as an
animal-rights activist might liberate a zoo. In 2008, he had thrown open PACER,
a subscription-only trove of federal judicial documents. And then he had
downloaded the 4.8 million articles from JSTOR. Swartz was ch arged, then, with
wire fraud, computer fraud, unlawfully obtaining information from a protected
computer and damaging a protected computer. really sad>>>


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