Toda IA Hoje é Treinada no Crime que o Matou

Books I recommend can be found at this link: https://www.youtube.com/shopcollectio... He helped build the internet before he got his driver's license. At 26, the US government threatened him with 35 years in prison. The crime? Downloading text files. Aaron Swartz didn't steal money and didn't leak anyone's data. He just asked a dangerous question: if knowledge is public, why is access private? At 12, he created a collaborative encyclopedia before Wikipedia existed. At 14, he helped write RSS — the invisible protocol that delivers podcasts and news to your phone to this day. At 15, he worked on the Creative Commons architecture. At 19, he co-founded Reddit and helped define Markdown. A lifetime's worth of experience before the age of 20. But it was while trying to free scientific articles locked behind paywalls that he became a target of the FBI. And here's the twist he didn't live to see: the movement Aaron was persecuted for—open data, free access to knowledge—quietly became the foundation of modern artificial intelligence. arXiv, peS2o, OpenScholar: the models that answer your questions about science were trained on exactly what they locked Aaron away. In this video, I show the complete story and the dilemma it left for the AI ​​era: when open knowledge becomes the training ground for a machine worth billions, who profits? ⏱️ CHAPTERS 00:00 The boy who scared the government 00:24 The prodigy: RSS, Creative Commons, Reddit 02:00 The dangerous question about knowledge 04:00 JSTOR, the FBI, and the 35 years in prison 07:00 The legacy: Aaron's Law and Sci-Hub 08:11 The twist: AI ate free data 09:21 The dilemma he left us 💬 And you: is paid knowledge fair protection or a prison of knowledge? Comment below. 🔔 Subscribe and activate the bell so you don't miss the next story. My name is Ozzy and I show the hidden beauty in data every day. Sources: 1. Aaron Swartz - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_S... 2. United States v. Swartz - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_... 3. Guerilla Open Access Manifesto - Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guerill... 4. Alleged Hacker Charged With Stealing Over Four Million Documents from MIT Network - U.S. Department of Justice https://www.justice.gov/archive/usao/... 5. FAQ | Report to the President: MIT and the Prosecution of Aaron Swartz - MIT https://swartz-report.mit.edu/faq.html 6. Aaron Swartz Inductee Biography – Internet Hall of Fame https://www.internethalloffame.org/in... 7. At A Young Age, Aaron Swartz Did A Lifetime Of Work - NPR https://www.npr.org/2013/01/13/169264... 8. How Aaron Swartz helped build the Internet - CNN Business https://www.cnn.com/2013/01/15/tech/w... 9. Pioneers in Tech: Aaron Swartz, co-developer of RSS - SmarterMSP https://smartermsp.com/pioneers-in-te... 10. Why Did the Justice System Target Aaron Swartz? -Rolling Stone https://www.rollingstone.com/politics... 11. Aaron Swartz, JSTOR: MIT can honor the Internet activist by fighting to make academic journals open to everyone - Slate https://slate.com/technology/2013/01/... 12. Malicious Life Podcast: The Aaron Swartz Story - Cybereason https://www.cybereason.com/blog/malic... 13. Aaron's PACER Project Explained - Aaron Swartz Day and International Hackathon https://www.aaronswartzday.org/pacer-... 14. PACER (Aaron Swartz) - Aaron Swartz Day and International Hackathon https://www.aaronswartzday.org/catego... 15. The FBI couldn't figure out how Aaron Swartz did what he did - MuckRock https://www.muckrock.com/news/archive... 16. Aaron Swartz - Fully Informed Jury Association (FIJA) https://fija.org/library-and-resource... 17. The Legacy of Aaron Swartz: The Fight for Open Access - Economics from the Top Down https://economicsfromthetopdown.com/2... 18. Digital Activist's Suicide Casts Spotlight on Growth of Open-Access Movement - Scientific American https://www.scientificamerican.com/ar... 19. 'Hacktivist' or Thief?: What the Aaron Swartz Case Means to the Open Access Movement - CCCC/NCTE https://cccc.ncte.org/cccc/committees... #AaronSwartz #Artificial Intelligence #Free Knowledge #InternetHistory #OpenDates