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Tagged: Reddit

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January 12, 2013
14:02 • 4 months ago

The tech community was quick to respond strongly to reports of Swartz’s death Saturday morning, with much written in reaction to his loss, including:

  • Tim Berners-Lee The man who created the Web mourned Swartz’s death as that of a fallen comrade in a poem on the W3C listserv. “Aaron is dead./Wanderers in this crazy world,/we have lost a mentor, a wise elder./Hackers for right, we are one down,/we have lost one of our own./Nurtures, careers, listeners, feeders,/parents all,/we have lost a child./Let us all weep.”
  • Cory Doctorow The Boing Boing co-founder, who had known Aaron since he was “14 or 15,” wishes it didn’t have to be this way. “Here’s a thing that I do wonder about this morning, and that I hope you’ll think about, too. I don’t know for sure whether Aaron understood that any of us, any of his friends, would have taken a call from him at any hour of the day or night. I don’t know if he understood that wherever he was, there were people who cared about him, who admired him, who would get on a plane or a bus or on a video-call and talk to him.”
  • Lawrence Lessig The Harvard Law professor and internet activist is quick to criticize the prosecution Swartz faced as heartless and at least partly to blame for Swartz’s death. “In that world, the question this government needs to answer is why it was so necessary that Aaron Swartz be labeled a ‘felon.’ For in the 18 months of negotiations, that was what he was not willing to accept, and so that was the reason he was facing a million dollar trial in April — his wealth bled dry, yet unable to appeal openly to us for the financial help he needed to fund his defense, at least without risking the ire of a district court judge.”

13:56 • 4 months ago
A community’s great loss: RSS co-creator, early Reddit employee, tech activist Aaron Swartz dies at 26
Swartz committed suicide as he faced a federal trial on criminal charges. One of the hacker world’s most iconic personalities, he had played a key role in building a number of things that defined the internet’s voice, helping build the RSS spec at the age of 14, helping build Reddit in its early days, and playing a key role in modern tech activism. It was this last aspect of his life that got him into significant legal trouble, as he faced a FBI investigation after publicly releasing large parts the for-pay PACER database to the public, then, two years later, found himself facing criminal charges after downloading millions of articles from the private JSTOR academic journal database. Swartz faced $4 million in fines as as many as 35 years in prison over felony charges related to the case — though both MIT and JSTOR declined civil actions in the case. (photo by quinnums/Flickr)
EDIT: Here’s a roundup of some noted tech-world reaction to Swartz’s death.

A community’s great loss: RSS co-creator, early Reddit employee, tech activist Aaron Swartz dies at 26

Swartz committed suicide as he faced a federal trial on criminal charges. One of the hacker world’s most iconic personalities, he had played a key role in building a number of things that defined the internet’s voice, helping build the RSS spec at the age of 14, helping build Reddit in its early days, and playing a key role in modern tech activism. It was this last aspect of his life that got him into significant legal trouble, as he faced a FBI investigation after publicly releasing large parts the for-pay PACER database to the public, then, two years later, found himself facing criminal charges after downloading millions of articles from the private JSTOR academic journal database. Swartz faced $4 million in fines as as many as 35 years in prison over felony charges related to the case — though both MIT and JSTOR declined civil actions in the case. (photo by quinnums/Flickr)

EDIT: Here’s a roundup of some noted tech-world reaction to Swartz’s death.

January 9, 2013
09:05 • 4 months ago
And he didn’t even hyperlink the f@(&!(& thing, so they, like, actually copy-and-pasted it, and opened up a new tab, and put it in,” said a senior official.

How Obama Won The Internet (via rachelfershleiser)

I bleeped the profanity because we apparently can’t handle running the f-word in big type. If you reblog this awesome quote, please consider adding it back.

November 6, 2012
19:01 • 6 months ago
October 24, 2012
17:06 • 6 months ago
I’m not happy that my sisters have to worry about being recorded in public, but I’m happy a police officer (for instance) has to worry about this the next time he’s doing a stop & frisk
Reddit co-founder Alex Ohanian • In an emailed statement to Jezebel, regarding the continued fallout from Gawker’s expose on former reddit moderator Michael “Violentacrez” Brutsch and the ensuing media focus on the site’s questionably legal and certifiably creepy corners. Ohanian’s comments echo those made by a number of other people involved with creating/running reddit on a daily basis, who argue that the protection of free speech requires the continued acceptance of content that make the vast majority of people uncomfortable. source
October 13, 2012
09:56 • 7 months ago
lead-andjelly says: Is there a reason you don’t actually, y’know, use his name?

» SFB says: Because we want people to actually click the links and read the full story. The link was a “teaser.” — Ernie @ SFB

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09:09 • 7 months ago
September 4, 2012
08:16 • 8 months ago
percolatehq:
Here’s how social media helped Obama steal Romney’s convention thunder last week. Let’s see if the tables will turn now that it’s the Dems show.
(via How Obama Stole Romney’s RNC Thunder With Clever Social Media | TechCrunch - Image source)

“Sure, Obama has the spotlight advantage because he’s the President, but it goes to show that all the money and staging in the world can’t compete with cleverness.”

percolatehq:

Here’s how social media helped Obama steal Romney’s convention thunder last week. Let’s see if the tables will turn now that it’s the Dems show.

(via How Obama Stole Romney’s RNC Thunder With Clever Social Media | TechCrunch - Image source)

“Sure, Obama has the spotlight advantage because he’s the President, but it goes to show that all the money and staging in the world can’t compete with cleverness.”

September 3, 2012
01:04 • 8 months ago
Digital food for thought: Reddit, co-founded by Alexis Ohanian (above) and purchased by Advance Publications in 2006, is doing boffo these days, becoming one of the most influential sites on the internet and even scoring President Obama for an “Ask Me Anything” event last week. What’s their secret? Well, Advance just let the company do its thing, taking a hands-off approach and letting it grow without heavy corporate influence. Advance is not doing this with all of its properties — its newspaper publications, for example, have been targeted for cutbacks in recent months, most notably the New Orleans Times-Picayune. Our thinking-aloud question here: What if Advance Publications somehow could figure out a way to treat its newspapers more like Reddit — to give them the freedom to do what they do without heavy corporate influence? That’s what this David Carr article got us thinking about. (photo by Ross Mantle/The New York Times)

Digital food for thought: Reddit, co-founded by Alexis Ohanian (above) and purchased by Advance Publications in 2006, is doing boffo these days, becoming one of the most influential sites on the internet and even scoring President Obama for an “Ask Me Anything” event last week. What’s their secret? Well, Advance just let the company do its thing, taking a hands-off approach and letting it grow without heavy corporate influence. Advance is not doing this with all of its properties — its newspaper publications, for example, have been targeted for cutbacks in recent months, most notably the New Orleans Times-Picayune. Our thinking-aloud question here: What if Advance Publications somehow could figure out a way to treat its newspapers more like Reddit — to give them the freedom to do what they do without heavy corporate influence? That’s what this David Carr article got us thinking about. (photo by Ross Mantle/The New York Times)

August 30, 2012
11:48 • 8 months ago
Recent posts and stuff we dig:
August 29, 2012
16:29 • 8 months ago
motherjones:

whut

There you go, folks. It’s totally Barack.

motherjones:

whut

There you go, folks. It’s totally Barack.

16:14 • 8 months ago
Obama doing an IAmA on Reddit at 4:30 p.m. EST: That sound you hear is the Reddit community dropping its jaw to the floor.

Obama doing an IAmA on Reddit at 4:30 p.m. EST: That sound you hear is the Reddit community dropping its jaw to the floor.

August 23, 2012
21:36 • 9 months ago
But still, because of my habit of linking to my own site where I post my own original content, I’ve been labeled a spammer and have been banned. I’ve messaged the admins twice in the last two weeks, but haven’t gotten any response. It seems that the only way I could avoid this is if I were to relinquish any rights to my original content and post it exclusively to Imgur.
Modern Primate blogger Chris Menning • Writing a tough criticism of the Reddit community, particularly in regards to the tendency of the system to be rigged against original content creators in favor of people who share content without necessarily giving credit. (Menning actually got banned from the site.) This has been an ongoing frustration for a number of humor blogs such as Slacktory and The Frogman, with these bloggers pointing out that it’s easier for a stolen, uncredited version of their content to go viral on Reddit via an uncredited Imgur link than it is for a blog post by the same author with the exact same content to do the same. Sites like Tumblr have a system that at least encourages sourcing content — do Reddit and Imgur need to do the same?
August 6, 2012
11:53 • 9 months ago
After years of trying, Reddit user African_Jesus finally pulled off a dream he’d been striving for — to have dinner at the White House with Obama. Above is the letter; here’s the thread where he asks Redditors to come up with questions for the President. (ht Andrew Hart)

After years of trying, Reddit user African_Jesus finally pulled off a dream he’d been striving for — to have dinner at the White House with Obama. Above is the letter; here’s the thread where he asks Redditors to come up with questions for the President. (ht Andrew Hart)

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