Wednesday, May 15, 2013

as the "war against drugs", trying to regulate 3D printing can be an invitation to disaster, however honorable intentions

On the Internet, things escalate fast - very fast. It starts with the plans of the first "full" 3D Printer gun (not quite complete: neither bullets nor hammer printable).

Cody Wilson, who designed the prototype drawings published online for anyone to download. After two days, and 100,000 downloads, the State Department ordered the killing.

plans explained in violation of United States controls on arms exports. The problem is not Americans have downloaded the plans, but the risk sanctioned groups somewhat abstract, or those affected by export bans discharge of weapons plans and printing.

The result of these good intentions certainly was predictable: it had exactly the opposite effect of what the State Department wanted. There is a famous Internet phenomenon - the Streisand effect - that, in short, says that there is no better way to promote an image, a story or upload to the Internet ban

news readers on the project soared, research has soared, the same models are already in use on the network file sharing Pirate Bay, including peer-to-peer and sites.

This is a very early - and ultimately, probably insignificant - cock-up in what could easily sink into a prolonged war online. Few people have 3D printers, and today it is not the best way to control illegal weapons. The design itself is supposed to be a "Saturday Night Special", perhaps a weapon dangerous to the user that the person concerned.

And that before getting anywhere near the U.S. Constitution, which is where things get really difficult. There is a common argument that had some sympathy for the American courts that code is speech. If the code is speech, then the planes are undoubtedly the word too. And speaking as any American schoolchild knows, is protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

As if that was not enough of a deterrent, trying to legislate or prosecute 3D printing could be one of the first subjects of history that unites the first and second amendment activists in same case. That would certainly be enough to give pause to many members of Congress.

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