A woman who has in the past been described as “the spiritual successor to Aaron Swartz” – who was a US web pioneer hounded to suicide by US prosecutors for making academic research available to everyone – has now learned the FBI is investigating her.
Alexandra Elbakyan is the founder of Sci-Hub, that fellow scientists say is “making publicly funded research freely available” – though her detractors have accused her of “copyright infringement and piracy.”
Still, those who support her have praised her work as a “modern Robin Hood who deserves a Nobel Prize.”
In any case, Kazakhstan-born Elbakyan, who, according to available information, lives in Russia (and may, if that’s the case, be well out of reach of the FBI), revealed on Twitter that she received an email informing her that the agency has been requesting her data from Apple.
Elbakyan included a screenshot of the conveniently “no-reply” email in her tweet, where Apple informed her that it in February 2019 received a request from the FBI for data pertaining to her account, and that the nature of the request was such that it only allowed the tech giant to notify the user with delay.
Apple also told Elbakyan that the requested data had been handed over, and washed its hands off the whole thing by advising the programmer that if she wanted to know more about the request and what kind of information the FBI wanted – she should talk to the FBI.
In the past, Elbakyan explained how Sci-Hub – which has been described as the world’s largest free “shadow” repository of academic articles – works, saying that it downloads content from university proxies.
Looming large in the background of the whole story is the issue of academic publishing, which has for many years been denounced as fundamentally broken, with tax-payer funded research hidden behind pricey paywalls, sometimes even from its authors, who are also often unable to decide to make their work open and free to the public due to threats from publishing corporations.
No wonder that the topic is highly polarizing, with publishers on one hand protecting their increasingly problematic model and going after anyone who challenges it – as more and more researchers get fed up with it and prone to supporting whoever is “liberating” this particular type of content.