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    Feds: Harvard fellow hacked millions of papers

    BOSTON (AP) — A Harvard University fellow who was studying ethics was charged with hacking into the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's computer network to steal nearly 5 million academic articles.

    Aaron Swartz, 24, was accused of stealing the documents from JSTOR, a popular research subscription service that offers digitized copies of more than 1,000 academic journals and documents, some dating back to the 17th century.

    In an indictment released Tuesday, prosecutors say Swartz stole 4.8 million articles between September 2010 and January after breaking into a computer wiring closet on MIT's campus. Swartz, a student at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, downloaded so many documents during one October day that some of JSTOR's computer servers crashed, according to the indictment.

    Prosecutors say Swartz intended to distribute the articles on file-sharing websites.

    Swartz turned himself in Tuesday and was arraigned in U.S. District Court, where he pleaded not guilty to charges including wire fraud, computer fraud and unlawfully obtaining information from a protected computer. He was released on $100,000 unsecured bond and faces up to 35 years in prison, if convicted.

    "Stealing is stealing whether you use a computer command or a crowbar, and whether you take documents, data or dollars," U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz said in a statement. "It is equally harmful to the victim whether you sell what you have stolen or give it away."

    A call to Swartz's attorney wasn't immediately returned. Swartz is due back in court Sept. 9.

    A spokeswoman for JSTOR said Tuesday that Swartz had agreed to return all the articles so the company can ensure they aren't distributed.

    "We don't own any of this content. We really have to responsible stewards of it," said spokeswoman Heidi McGregor. "We worked hard to find out what was going on. We worked hard to get the data back."

    Swartz is an online activist who founded the website Demand Progress, which says it "works to win progressive policy changes for ordinary people."

    The site describes Swartz as "the author of numerous articles on a variety of topics, especially the corrupting influence of big money on institutions including nonprofits, the media, politics, and public opinion." It said he and another researcher once downloaded and analyzed more than 440,000 law review articles to determine their funding sources.

    Demand Progress's executive director David Segal said on the website that the charges against Swartz don't make sense.

    "It's like trying to put someone in jail for allegedly checking too many books out of the library," he said.

    A Harvard spokesman said Swartz was placed on leave from a 10-month fellowship after the university learned about the investigation. He said the fellowship ended last month.

    Swartz had legitimate access to JSTOR through Harvard, but the company has usage restrictions that would have prevented such colossal downloads.

    The nonprofit JSTOR, founded in 1995, enables libraries to save space, time and labor by digitally storing centuries worth of academic journals. Its oldest publication is a Proceedings of the Royal Society of London from 1665.

    Its annual subscription fees can cost a large research university as much as $50,000.

    According to the indictment, Swartz connected a laptop to MIT's system in September 2010 through a basement network wiring closet and registered as a guest under the fictitious name, Gary Host, in which the first initial and last name spell "ghost." He then used a software program to "rapidly download at extraordinary volume of articles from JSTOR," according to the indictment.

    In the following months, MIT and JSTOR tried to block the recurring and massive downloads, on occasion denying all MIT users access to JSTOR. But Swartz allegedly got around it, in part, by disguising the computer source of the demands for data.

    In November and December, Swartz allegedly made 2 million downloads from JSTOR, 100 times the number made during the same period by all legitimate JSTOR users at MIT.

    The indictment also alleges that on Jan. 6, Swartz went to the wiring closet to remove the laptop, attempting to shield his identity by holding a bike helmet in front of his face and seeing his way through its ventilation holes. It said that he fled when MIT police tried to question him that day.

    624 comments

    • joe  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      In a Harvard Ethics class you learn that there is no such thing as right and wrong.
    • Quint  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      Congratulations Aaron Swartz, with your ethics training, you're now qualified to be an elected official.
    • Chuck  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      A lot of people are here complaining this clown was "only" doing the equivalent of borrowing a book. Borrowing a book does not include breaking into a library and hacking into someone else's computer system.

      That is the problem with the hackers of today. Their situational "ethics" tell them that if information is on a computer somewhere, then it is public domain and should be free to anyone. That is a crock. Using that logic, if I am paying for cable television, then it is perfectly alright for my neighbor to tap my cable lines and not have to pay anything for the service that I have to pay for.

      Information isn't free. People work long and hard, studying and researching, putting the investment in both time and money into their work. Someone else comes along and "liberates" that work is as low as it goes. It is one thing if a researcher donates that work (Ben Franklin was famous for this), but live in the real world people. Someone has given their all, paid their dues, and finally gets the opportunity to get paid for all that work, and you seriously think it is fine to just steal from them?
    • dream  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      MIT's computer got hacked and stolen by Harvard's ethics fellow......Wow! where does irony begin and end?
    • American  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      This is what Harvard teaches
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      an "education" only allows you to THINK your smarter than others----it obviously doesn't MAKE you smarter
    • George Pìmpington  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      And you wonder why most lawyers and politicians are all a bunch of crooks? Here ya go...
    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      The dipshit tried to hide his identity and ran from the cops. Think he knew he was breaking the law? Guilty. Call the next case.
    • Otto Pilot  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      How ironic. Studying ethics. Brilliant.
    • icd tm  •  1 yr 6 mths ago
      Harvard, Yale, and other "privileged" institutions produces the most corrupted selfish elites in the world in one basic goal, "KEEP THE MASSES SLAVES to them !"