He railed hard against the idea of government-funded scientific research being unavailable to the public, and his passion continues to motivate the open access community. Long before that, he played key roles in the development of RSS, RDF, and Creative Commons. He and his organization Demand Progress worked closely with EFF to stop SOPA. When you look around the digital rights community, it's easy to find Aaron's fingerprints all over it. On the fifth anniversary of the death of Aaron Swartz, EFF activist Elliot Harmon posted a remembrance:
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Wired calls it "the biggest protest movement in Iran since the 2009 Green Movement uprising," criticing tech companies which " continue to deny services to Iranians that could be crucial to free and open communications." "By the time they wake up, the government will have lost control of the internet," said Mehdi Yahyanejad, executive director of NetFreedom Pioneers, a California-based technology nonprofit that largely focuses on Iran and develops educational and freedom of information tools. Some of the tools were attracting three or four times more unique users a day than they were before the internet crackdown, potentially weakening government efforts to control access to information online. But the crackdown is driving millions of Iranians to tech tools that can help them evade censors, according to activists and developers of the tools. Authorities in Tehran have ratcheted up their policing of the internet in the past week and a half, part of an attempt to stamp out the most far-reaching protests in Iran since 2009.