1. A thinking man, is a dangerous man. Not only to others, but himself.

    4 months ago  /  0 notes

  2. Society is really starting to bother me with all of the philosophy’s they force onto people, and a lot of the movie fairytale shiz, booo hate for government, society ect increases daily 

    Gonna play skyrim.

    or diablo…

    uh shit.

    poopide poop poopie 

    Fun day at home alone though, might aswell have some more… “fun” heheheh

    4 months ago  /  0 notes

  3. motherboardtv:

Aaron Swartz’s Tragic Battle With Copyright
Aaron H. Swartz, one of our our most vigorous champions of open access and copyright reform, committed suicide in New York City on Friday at the age of 26. 
He was a pioneer and a renegade, part of the team that built Reddit as well as the widely-used RSS protocol. But he first began making headlines for a coding exploit that he undertook in September of 2010, when he used MIT’s servers to scrape and download some two million academic articles stored by the online catalog JSTOR using a program named keepgrabbing.py. Per copyright law, it may have been illegal or, as some argue, “inconsiderate”: these articles were meant only to be available to MIT affiliates, not to the wider world that Swartz believed deserved better access to the world’s information. 
MIT didn’t press charges and neither did JSTOR. The government, however, decided to throw the book at Swartz, eventually hitting him with 13 separate charges and threatening to send him to prison for decades. According to his mother, Swartz was depressed about the court case and possibility of years in prison. He’d contemplated suicide in the past and, for unknown reasons, followed through this time.
READ MORE
- by Leandro Oliva and Adam Clark Estes

He looks crazily like me

    motherboardtv:

    Aaron Swartz’s Tragic Battle With Copyright

    Aaron H. Swartz, one of our our most vigorous champions of open access and copyright reform, committed suicide in New York City on Friday at the age of 26. 

    He was a pioneer and a renegade, part of the team that built Reddit as well as the widely-used RSS protocol. But he first began making headlines for a coding exploit that he undertook in September of 2010, when he used MIT’s servers to scrape and download some two million academic articles stored by the online catalog JSTOR using a program named keepgrabbing.py. Per copyright law, it may have been illegal or, as some argue, “inconsiderate”: these articles were meant only to be available to MIT affiliates, not to the wider world that Swartz believed deserved better access to the world’s information. 

    MIT didn’t press charges and neither did JSTOR. The government, however, decided to throw the book at Swartz, eventually hitting him with 13 separate charges and threatening to send him to prison for decades. According to his mother, Swartz was depressed about the court case and possibility of years in prison. He’d contemplated suicide in the past and, for unknown reasons, followed through this time.

    READ MORE

    - by Leandro Oliva and Adam Clark Estes

    He looks crazily like me

    4 months ago  /  4,383 notes  /  Source: motherboardtv

  4. I can show you the world, through rose glasses.

    4 months ago  /  0 notes

  5. And you can have it all, My empire of dirt.

    4 months ago  /  0 notes

  6. Take your time. Breathe in. Make it count.

    4 months ago  /  0 notes

  7. Singing hallelujah and crying to myself. Greaaaaaaaaat day.

    5 months ago  /  0 notes

  8. I’ve made up my mind

    5 months ago  /  0 notes

  9. What am i dooooooooing!!!

    5 months ago  /  0 notes

  10. I wish someone could love as passionately as me. ugh, i just want people to try so hard and i get upset when they don’t.

    5 months ago  /  0 notes