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What Aaron Swartz did to himself was tragic, but he did decide to break the law. Something that is glossed over here.

We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46066132 and marked it offtopic.

You would do that. You're so unethical. Remember when you covered up uBiome?

https://www.ycombinator.com/companies?query=ubiome


Of course we didn't:

YC-backed uBiome is basically Theranos-lite - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30899352 - April 2022 (173 comments)

SF poop-testing startup, once compared to Theranos, charged in $60M fraud scheme - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26531087 - March 2021 (380 comments)

UBiome Offices Searched by FBI - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19760449 - April 2019 (56 comments)

Many more: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

The interesting thing is why this (false) accusation appears now, years later. I don't recall people saying it at the time, which makes sense because it was obviously untrue.


You removed it from the directory. Not very honest, is it?

Also, how is criticizing Aaron Swartz off topic? The other commenter brought it up. No one made him commit suicide but HN has a boner for this guy like he's a victim.


The YC directory is a YC feature, not an HN one. I'm pretty certain HN mods (dang, tomhow) have no direct influence over that, though they might care how inclusion/exclusion of investment embarrassments reflects on HN itself.

HN itself clearly hasn't shied away from critical coverage of that venture.

Your other argument shows a distinct lack of empathy and a certain disregard for facts of the matter.


I consider it to be part of the hacker's spirit to bend or break unjust laws when the situation calls for it.

So I wouldn't gloss over the specific law(s) he broke, so much as I would outright celebrate that he did so.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerilla_Open_Access_Manifesto


I think anyone can be a hacker. Anyone can break any laws. But to kill yourself over it? It's in the extreme. I don't believe law enforcement has to take the blame for that.

The only reference to Swartz that I see in the parent comment is:

> Through good times and rough ones, including the loss of Aaron Swartz (who I only knew of through HN), this has stayed a place for real conversation.

And the rest was just upbeat talk in general.

Unless the parent comment was edited, I don't understand why you responded:

> What Aaron Swartz did to himself was tragic, but he did decide to break the law. Something that is glossed over here.

By "here", I assume you mean "HN in general", but your comment comes off as loaded (e.g., "did to himself" sounds like a conscious attempt at asserting a framing), and the timing seems poor (i.e., that particular innocuous comment, on this particular day).


I hope you hold the same contempt for every tech company and their "rules only apply to the poor" attitude about copyright.

I'm going to break the law right now and watch some illegally downloaded movies. MPAA RIAA FBI CIA NSA come at me

If we had a thousand more people like him, maybe this world wouldn't be such a shitty place.

Take heart: there are a lot of people like Aaron Swartz. Of course you'll find them in proportionally fewer numbers, when you look somewhere that attracts with money/power.

Laws are necessary evils. Zealotry in the application of law helps absolutely no one and is one of the evils the necessity of laws creates.

Aaron Swartz deserved, at worst, a slap on the wrist, not the kind of severe harassment in the name of the law which he got.


Filezilla is horrible software compared to software like Transmit. What you have to understand is that someone with no artistic vision sat down and decided to build an FTP client for the masses. Fortunately, vibe coding will fix this. We will have much better software in the future. It will be free. It will be a commodity.

What do people use mac servers for?

Running CI for Iphone / Ipad dev?

20 years ago the company I worked for used a Mac-Mini for video transcoding, because there was some DRM issue we had to deal with, I don't remember the specifics.


It's not strictly speaking a server even. Just a rented personal computer.

running macOS, which runs Xcode, which is required for making and signing iOS and macOS apps, Witcher, then sold on the App Store for money dust justifying spending money on their, or a similar service.

Generally the main purpose was CI, blockchain mining and AI training

MacOS dev and CI.

To compile and test software for Mac.

NYT did a story on that as well and interviewed a few people. Maybe the scary part is that it isn't who you think it would be and it also shows how attractive an alternative reality is to many people. What does that say about our society.

Maybe the real AI was the friends we lost along the way

I have a lot of bad days every year. More than I can count. It's just part of living.

I like to tell people I have 128GB. It's pretty rare to meet someone like me that isn't swapping all the time.


I also tell people that. It’s not true, but it’s free.


This seems really useful.


Agents pretty good at describing how a particular feature works. It's not as dire as you make it seem.


that's what i mean


I doubt it is Buffett personally. He has Todd Combs and Ted Weschler making these kind of decisions.


The owner must have subscriptions to these services. Some paywalls are absolute and it bypasses all of them with ease. I don't see it now but there was a time when archiving a reddit page showed the username that their bot was using.


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