Aaron Swartz, co-founder of Reddit, helped create RSS.
Swartz, 26, left no note before his Friday morning death in the
seventh-floor apartment at a luxury Sullivan Place building, police
sources said.
His girlfriend, Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman, found Swartz’s body
hanging from a belt just inside his bedroom window, sources said.
Swartz’s death, ruled a suicide by the city medical examiner, came two
years to the day after his arrest on allegations of breaching a computer
network to download millions of pages of documents kept at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
His trial on federal felony charges, which carried a possible 35-year
prison sentence and $1 million fine, was set to begin in February.
Swartz had pleaded not guilty.
Grieving family members said the federal prosecution drove Swartz to suicide.
“Aaron’s death is not simply a personal tragedy,” his family said in a
statement. “It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with
intimidation and prosecutorial overreach. Decisions made by officials in
the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office and at MIT contributed to his
death.”
Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, who could not be reached for comment, paid his respects to the Swartz family via Twitter.
Other colleagues remembered Swartz’s exceptional mind.
“He was brilliant, and funny,” said friend Larry Lessig, a Harvard Law
professor, in a blog post. “A kid genius. A soul, a conscience.”
Aaron Swartz with partner Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman.
Swartz was a computer prodigy who designed his first website at age 13
— and dropped out of high school after just one year. At 14, he helped
write the RSS program that alerts users to new blog posts.
He later co-founded the social news website Reddit, enjoying a
financial windfall in 2006 when it sold to Conde Nast’s Wired Digital.
The self-educated Swartz was admitted to Stanford as a sociology
major, but he dropped out after a year as well. He also founded Demand
Progress, an Internet group that campaigns against Web censorship, and
became known as a cyber Robin Hood — providing free Web content to one
and all.
In 2008, he single-handedly made 20 million pages of federal court
documents available, for free, before the government shut him down. The
pages were typically sold for 10 cents apiece.
“His stunts were breathtaking,” wrote longtime friend Cory Doctorow on
his blog. “Aaron accomplished some amazing things in his life.”
No comments:
Post a Comment