House Bill Would Mandate Smart Gun Tech By U.S. Manufacturers 750
Lucas123 writes "U.S. Rep. John Tierney (D-Mass) is pushing a bill that would require all U.S. handgun manufacturers to include 'personalization technology' in their weapons. Tierney said he got the idea for The Personalized Handgun Safety Act of 2013 from the latest James Bond film, Skyfall. In it Bond escapes death when his handgun, which is equipped with technology that recognizes his fingerprints, becomes inoperable when a bad guy picks it up. 'This technology, however, isn't just for the movies — it's a reality,' Tierney said. Tierney pointed to a myriad of cases where the smart gun tech could prevent children from being harmed or killed in firearms accidents. Jim Wallace, executive director of the Massachusetts Gun Owners Action League, the official state association of the NRA, said he knows of no gun owners who would want smart gun technology on their weapons. Wallace said any technology that may impede the proper function of a weapon is a problem. He pointed to the fact that any integrated processor technology would also require a battery of some kind, which could pose a system failure if it lost power."
Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
Lawmakers have been introducing these bills since at least the mid-90s, with Judge Dredd being the first movie I'm aware of directly tied to it.
The tech was not then, and is not now, possible. They're MOVIES. That's not REALITY.
Our elected officials are dumber than you could possibly imagine.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Funny)
But. But.
Instructional Videos [imdb.com]!
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Interesting)
You willing to bet your liberty in a self-defense case on microcircuitry that is never checked or maintained, a lens that might be obstructed or smeared, and the assumption that if there isn't a perfect picture, you're hiding some kind of guilt?
"Mr. Johnson, how do we know you didn't put your blood all over the end of that gun before your wife used it to murder a poor, helpless transient you two had lured to your home for deviant sex? There's no picture. You must be trying to hide something."
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Informative)
You willing to bet your liberty in a (snip)
No, he probably just looked up the statistics on the number of people that have been killed with their own gun. This is why police officers are trained to always keep their hand on their weapon during a traffic stop or during any other time when they're questioning someone who isn't in custody, and why once their gun has been drawn, they typically move away and don't holster it again until backup arrives and a second officer can approach and subdue. The risk is very real.
self-defense case on microcircuitry that is never checked or maintained
Your computer has tons of microcircuitry. Far more than this technology would require. If your life depended on being able to complete a call to the police using a VoIP product, do you think you could do it as fast as with a regular, land-line phone, assuming you had the software already installed and configured?
The fact that something isn't checked or maintained is not an indictment against its reliability. Maintenance usually happens on a schedule -- days, weeks, years, even decades. You don't just assume your car is going to run out of oil because you haven't checked the oil since the last time you started it -- you know that as long as you check it every 7,000 miles, or whatever the manual says, you do not have to worry about that. Why would a gun be different?
a lens that might be obstructed or smeared,
You know, you're working this technology all crabbed. A police officer could be issued a gun with a RF component in it that operated around 800 MHz or so. At this frequency, the signal clings to a person's skin and clothing. A low-power, short-range transmitter, perhaps embedded in the officer's radio, could complete the circuit. Thus if the officer was not in physical contact with the gun, it wouldn't fire.
Biometric identification isn't the only way of securing a weapon.
and the assumption that if there isn't a perfect picture, you're hiding some kind of guilt?
That's a social and legal problem, not a technical problem. Let's try and keep on topic here; This is a feasibility study, not an exhaustive analysis of "what if" scenarios...
"Mr. Johnson, how do we know you didn't put your blood all over the end of that gun before your wife used it to murder a poor, helpless transient you two had lured to your home for deviant sex? There's no picture. You must be trying to hide something."
Strike my last; ... not an exhaustive analysis of conspiracy theories.
Now, as has become increasingly common on Slashdot (I miss the old days), nothing in what I've said is either for or against whatever political cause or position you're advocating. It is simply, and purely, an engineering analysis. What Congress is, or isn't doing, or whatever your political beliefs are, or even mine, are irrelevant here. This about answering IF we can do this with the technology available today, not should we do it.
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"Biometric identification isn't the only way of securing a weapon."
It's not even a good one.
The problem is not that such identification technology is impossible. The problem is that it is impossible to make it that reliable with today's technology, while still being able to perform its security function (keeping the bad guys from using the gun). You can have one, or you can have the other, but so far -- despite several products that have been hyped -- nobody has come even close to doing both. You have to have both or it's worse than useless, because it will get good peo
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
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The only thing to worry about would be people becomming over-reliant on the technology and allowing anyone to access their weapon under the assumption that they co
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Informative)
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Just how do you propose you do that. The trouble isn't about false positives or negatives in the mechanism. The trouble is that there is any mechanism at all.
Well, it's "fail open" vs "fail closed". What about a mechanism that disables the gun if it detects that an unauthorized person is trying to use it? If the mechanism is not operational (no power etc), the gun works as normal.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
That would defeat the purpose, as most people would just yank the batteries out immediately. Give me a tool that works reliably, that I can have confidence in -- and let *me* worry about keeping it safe. I don't want a tool that will PROBABLY work, hopefully, that I still have to worry about keeping safe anyway because it's a damned gun and if you're not worrying about keeping it safe you don't deserve to have it.
Plus all this mess actually isn't trying to add anything to guns, it's all just gun prohibition in the disguise of technology that is not available or possible.
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That would defeat the purpose, as most people would just yank the batteries out immediately.
Why? Also, how about making the batteries hard to remove (or disable the gun mechanically if the battery is not present)? The idea would be that 1) the kid may not be able to figure out how to do it and that 2) removing the batteries would take time so wold make the gun useless if it was taken from you by the attacker.
Add a requirement to keep the batteries in the gun to the law and it will have the desired result - 100% chance that the owner can fire the gun and >0% chance that someone not authorized ca
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Insightful)
good thing you posted AC.
None of the items in your "reasonable argument" stop gun violence. One of them mitigates the damage from gun violence (bulletproof vest) and the other substitutes one violence for another (gun-spotting automatic defense turrets). I am not entirely sure how you came to the brilliant idea that gun-spotting automatic defense turrets are "reasonable" though, if you are up to it, please explain how they are reasonable from a technology, cost, and political feasibility perspective. I myself wouldn't be too comfortable walking down a street with these automated snipers looking for gun-like objects on my person, etc. Bulletproof vests are reasonable? Like, we all put ours on in the morning when we wake up and wear them all day? Kids too? The same kids that get tired carrying their lunch box home from school?
Dude! (I assume dude since we're on slashdot) I think you need to recalibrate your reasonableness meter.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Insightful)
Who the fuck said anything about some sort of whizbang electronically-ignited primers? Although that would probably be a pretty cool technology (if the primer required a signature that was tagged to a biometric property of the owner), that is not anything like what is being considered.
That's the problem with the legislation...it doesn't consider the fact that unless you have a full "fire-by-wire" setup, it's essentially impossible to implement a "smart gun" without it being trivial to bypass.
The integrated trigger safety on the various Glock handguns is a good example of how this would work, except that is purely mechanical, and this would be electronic. So, instead of a physical push of an extra lever to move a pin that blocks the trigger from being completely pulled (or possibly the firing pin from moving), there will be electronics, and they would have to be fairly seriously sophisticated. For example, unless the trigger is greatly enlarged, the sensor would have to be very small (less than 1/8" wide) and would have to deal with different positioning of the finger (since nobody is ever exactly the same on the grip), and should be able to accommodate at least two fingers in memory (for off-hand shooting).
Regardless of how sophisticated the electronics are, the problem is that this sort of thing is easily disabled simply by removing whatever is doing the blocking, which completely bypasses the electronics. So, although this might keep a gun from being fired quickly after someone who isn't the owner gains possession, it won't stop a real criminal with long-term plans for the gun.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
Regardless. Any policy driven technology adoption should be first forced upon the police and the military before it's forced on civilians. If a cop wouldn't want this technology then it's not something that anyone else should have forced on them either.
Mandating that civilians can only own guns that don't work is just a transparent attempt to side step the law.
Let cops and soldiers adopt this stuff first.
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What's your plan for when somebody is attacked and injured, and a stranger is trying to help them?
All of a sudden, you've cursed a good samaritan with a highly evolved rock in a life-threatening situation.
Before you pass this off as far-flung chance, quite a few police officers have been saved because of this exact scenario. And some victims they were attempting to help have lived this way after the responding officer was injured or killed.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Interesting)
Judge Dredd's gun 'executes' anybody else who tries to fire it. Are they going to implement that feature, too?
When people who've never seen it write the rules (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not a doctor or pharmacist, so I don't have any opinion on proper methods manufacture, store, or otherwise handle various classes of prescription drugs.
I have no idea what regulations make sense. It would be STUPID of me to comment on how a pharmacy must be run since I don't know anything about the subject.
Why is it that people who have no knowledge at all, people who don't know the difference between a machine gun and a pistol, want to decide on gun regulations?
This is a fact - anti-gunners, including congress-critters, REGULARLY confuse an automatic (machine gun) with a semi-automatic (pistol). They claim to be
trying to "ban automatic weapons" (machine guns), but their bill bans pistols and varmint guns, which are semi-automatic.
Re:When people who've never seen it write the rule (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is it that people who have no knowledge at all, people who don't know the difference between a machine gun and a pistol, want to decide on gun regulations?
This is a fact - anti-gunners, including congress-critters, REGULARLY confuse an automatic (machine gun) with a semi-automatic (pistol).
Why is it that in the past whenever I've confused a machine gun with a gun that's merely an automatic I've always been corrected and told that a machine gun is an automatic, but automatic doesn't mean machine gun? I've long come to the conclusion that guns are one of those subjects where, unless you're part of the club, you're always wrong because the actual facts and definitions dance in some mysterious pattern. It's like using some group's slang if you're not part of the group. Even if you get the meaning just right, you're still wrong.
Re:When people who've never seen it write the rule (Score:4, Insightful)
This particular guy is blowing smoke, but at least he's attempting to address a problem. That is already better than the hordes of people who apparently wish the rest of us would forget that every now and then someone goes bonkers and shoots up a bunch of elementary school kids.
You have more faith in the DNC than I do. All I've seen them do is use tragedies to push their long-term political goal of ensuring that Americans do not have access to firearms. (They're not subtle about this goal, except when they're pushing gun laws. Then they pretend to have never said it.) None of the measures they have proposed would have done anything to prevent those tragedies, but they would have the effect of advancing the DNC's distinctly statist agenda of making people increasingly reliant on the State for everything from basic necessities to personal safety.
(And please, no rants about how Republicans are evil and corrupt too. Yes, they are. But on this issue they happen to be coincidentally right.)
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Re:When people who've never seen it write the rule (Score:4)
Also, this says absolutely nothing about the ridiculous number of inner cities kids that are killed with guns in their own neighborhoods every day, mostly young black kids killing other young black kids which sparks little-to-no outrage or knee-jerk legislation. So, do we really hate kids getting shot, or only certain groups of kids in certain locations?
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
The technology is technically possible. However, I have a few points to make:
1. Guns are currently purely mechanical. Adding ANYTHING electronic into the firing system is going to lower reliability. Remember, the most common police weapon(Glock) doesn't even have a manual safety switch. The recognition system would have to work 99.999999% of the time in a fraction of a second.
2. When fired, the firearm itself suffers a large shock. One 9mm handgun weighs 770 grams, fires a 7.45 gram projectile at 390 m/s. Laws of physics means that every time the handgun is fired it suffers a shock sufficient to move it back at 3.8 m/s, or 14 km/hour. That is NASTY to electronics, it's roughly equivalent to being hit with a hammer. It's mean to mechanical parts as well, but at least we've had hundreds of years of engineering to fix the issues.
3. Perhaps most critical, police officers are much more likely to be killed by their own weapon after it's been taken from them. 26 officers over 10 years [fbi.gov]. (or have others killed with their weapon if taken from them). Despite this, police organizations(departments, unions, professional) will campaign hard and long to exempt themselves from any such gun legislation. I believe that New Jersey already has a smart gun requirement on the books - but no gun manufacturer makes a firearm that meets the standard.
4. The common figuring is a lot like that of DRM - a 'smart gun' will stop a non-authorized person only on a tactical, immediate basis. Criminals will be able to bypass any protections on a long term scale(IE days) if they successfully steal the weapon, making any 'smart guns' of limited protection.
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Years ago, I took the attitude of "vote out the people you don't like", but came to the realization that if you do that by electing the other party, you just have to vote him back out in the next election. That's why I have almost exclusively come to exclude Democrats and Republicans from my voting selections. Every so often, an individual candidate changes my mind, but only a solid track record is sufficient for me to do it.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Funny)
FTFY; some of us wised up to that some time ago, and thus only vote for third parties (if at all).
Is that working out as well for you as my one-man air-travel boycott is for me?
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Interesting)
If you're boycotting air travel, you're missing out on the fun.
ALWAYS opt out and ask for the free massage.
Giggling and moaning while they pat you down is half the fun of air travel. Either the TSA agent "gets it" and has a laugh along with you, or it REALLY pisses them off, which can be even more fun. Bonus points for having an erection.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Insightful)
It's the non gun owning liberals who propose this legislation. By definition they know nothing about guns. They never owned one and don't know how they work. This is not flame bait but it truth.
This is trivially not true.
Not owning a gun now does not imply never having owned a gun and neither statements imply not knowing how they work let alone the even more general statement about knowing nothering about guns.
I suspect the number of people who know nothing about guns (at least counting those people who would qualify to vote in most democracies if they were citizens) is very small. If you want to make an argument that those proposing such legislation lack sufficient knwledge of the subject to do so competantly then that's just fine but making wild statements that are trivial to disprove doesn't exactly lend credibility.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
I find the vast majority of the population knows nearly nothing about guns. For example, I encounter very few people who realize that "assault weapon" is not an actual type of gun but rather a 100% political buzzword with no definition. Also on the political front, very few seem to have caught on to the gimmick statistic of "gun crime" and why it is meaningless if gun legislation impacts it. The number who understand gun safety, have significant actual hours logged with a gun, and understand gun physics and basic gun mechanics amount to very small handful over the years and all of them gun owners. The number of people who think a semi-automatic rifle is military grade weaponry is staggering. The number who know what semi-automatic actually means is disheartening.
Re:Movies are real! (Score:4, Informative)
Interestingly enough, they (liberals) count suicide as a "gun crime", or "gun violence" or whatever, so they can vastly inflate the numbers of actual gun crimes. Some 60% of all gun deaths are suicide. Another interesting fact, suicides in the US, per capita, is very similar (statistical blip) to countries with strict gun controls, which only prove that suicidal people will kill themselves, regardless of method.
All of this doesn't matter, because "guns are scary" (tm)
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Interesting)
I know I'm tempting the flame gods here but you never explained what was a lie. Per capita are the suicide rates not very similar? Are you claiming that suicide attempts are similar and with easier access to guns they are more often successful? Because the GP seemed to be claiming that suicides (I would interpret that as successful (bad wording?) ) occur at similar rates regardless of easy access to guns. Which is in direct opposition to your claim and your statistics don't actually have anything to do with that.
Going off like a lose cannon does not help your argument.
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Scary, scary, scary... (Score:3, Insightful)
To defend our country in the absence of a standing army, we must allow the civilians to arm themselves to serve in the army when it is assembled".
This is one of the scarier statements I've read, "...we must allow the civilians to arm themselves...". The statement itself shows the low level of understanding of the U.S. Constitution in this country.
The Bill of Rights gives zero, none, no rights to the people. There are no rights in the Bill of Rights that "allow civilians" to do something. It is just the o
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I'm a liberal. And I was an NRA certified gun instructor, and I'm not anti-gun though I am certainly in favor of people keeping guns under control, and keeping guns away from people who shouldn't have them. And I can certainly see why people would want guns to be shootable only by the owner. Gun manufacturers have been showing off guns like this for decades. The challenge is that for this to be effective, the large majority of guns would have to implement this sort of mechanism, because otherwise it's too e
Re:Movies are real! (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the non gun owning liberals who propose this legislation.
For the record, I'm a non-gun owning liberal (though I've fired a few handguns, rifles and shotguns and have some minimal training) and I think this kind of legislation is dumb.
Firearms are tools with a specific function and purpose. They need to work when they're suppose to work and it's the owner's responsibility to ensure they're safe otherwise. If you have children in your house, lock up your guns/ammunition and teach your children firearm safety when they're able to understand. If you can't do these things and/or you cannot operate your own weapon safely, don't own/carry firearms or come to terms that you and or your child may become Darwin Award winners.
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the same argument applies not just to guns, but to every single dangerous tool or piece of machinery. the only reason guns get singled out is because there is, for what ever reason, LESS of a culture of safety with them than other tools. Stupid non gun owning tv directors and movie directors are just as much to blame. The majority of true accidents that arise from guns often occur because they are mishandled ... and often in a way EXACTLY as they mimic watching it on tv or in a movie.
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[Citation Needed]
Just because you can get elected, does not mean you are smart. At all.
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It's a psychological trick to get people to stop thinking. Once you get people into the us or them mentality you can manipulate them into views, justify horrible atrocities to other human beings, get them to hate people they know
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Every time I watch Westworld, the first thing that goes through my mind when seeing that explanation is "richochet".
The next thing that occurs to me is that bottles, chairs, and windows don't have any of those safeguards built into them. The same probably goes for the swords and lances in Roman and Medieval world.
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Every time there's been a demonstration of this sort of technology, it has failed. The one time it didn't, it was quickly revealed that the only reason it worked is because it had been disabled -- that is, it was just a regular gun going bang.
Biometrics are great in a controlled environment, but you're talking about a gun. Maybe a rifle, maybe a handgun. Maybe it's a hunting rifle, and maybe it's covered in snow. Or sand. Or mud. Maybe the hand holding it is wearing a glove. Or is covered in sweat.
It
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Comes close: http://www.tarnhelm.com/magna-trigger/gun/safety/magna1.html [tarnhelm.com]
My thoughts on the matter (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My thoughts on the matter (Score:5, Insightful)
"I'll happily put this on my own guns after the police have used it for five years on theirs," ... or all persons protecting the good congressman.
Re:My thoughts on the matter (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that police need it more than private citizens, as they spend more time around criminals who are likely to try and grab the gun.
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"I'll happily put this on my own guns after the police have used it for five years on theirs," ... or all persons protecting the good congressman.
I consider this equivalent to requiring Ignition Interlocks in all cars. Yes, it will do exactly what we want - it will stop people from using those items - but at the most inopportune times. Give it to the legislators, and you'll discover it's only the prohibitionist ones that will accept it.
Imagine if Ignition Interlocks were mandated - they would be hacked so fast. People aren't going to deal with that level of intrusiveness just to potentially 'save lives'. This is a case of security causing too mu
Re:My thoughts on the matter (Score:4, Insightful)
Also a gun owner, and I completely agree with your point #2, without sarcasm.
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3) All in all, Congressman Tierney did this, in all likelihood, to help solidify his re-election next year. Since he got the press he wanted, I congratulate him now on his impending victory.
He's from Massachusetts, home of the gerrymander. His district is just north of Boston. His seat is in no real threat.
But you're right, this is just another pointless "feel-good" measure to prove to his constituents that he's "tough on crime." It's also a ploy to get Republicans to vote against it, allowing that stupid "mayors for gun control" PAC to run ads against them.
DOA (Score:3)
There's no way this boneheaded bill will get past the Republican controlled House.
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There's no way this boneheaded bill will get past the Republican controlled House.
It's not about getting past . . . it's about posturing, posing and voguing by the Rep. He just wants to make a fuss about something so his constituents will maybe think that he is actually doing something useful for them.
Why waste time on a no-chance bill proposal . . . ? Publicity, of course.
A Better Idea (Score:5, Insightful)
How about we actually fucking teach kids about guns, how they work, and what they're used for? That would do a hell of a lot more to curtail gun-related deaths, and without the (un)intended side effect of rendering personal protection weapons useless by legislative fiat.
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Re:A Better Idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the right will complain about schools brainwashing our kids into thinking guns are dangerous, and the left will scream apoplectic about schools brainwashing our kids into thinking guns could be safe.
Bullshit. Gun Safety training would gain instant support among the right, as well as any thinking person.
The younger the better. There are far too many stories about kids thinking they have a toy and killing a sibling, all caused by the big left wing no-no against teaching kids anything about guns, or even so much as drawing a picture of one in school. Its the whole security by obscurity argument all over again in the physical world.
The right already knows guns are dangerous, and that every gun is treated like a loaded gun, and have been teaching this to their kids since they were old enough to walk. Its the delusional left who believe if we can just hide the existence of guns the whole problem will go away.
I took gun safety courses in grade school. We fired .22 short single shot rifles IN the School Basement during gun safety class. (4th or 5th grade as I recall). Of course by this time it was old hat to me since I had been hunting with my parents for many years by that time.
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Because the right will complain about schools brainwashing our kids into thinking guns are dangerous
Nobody thinks guns aren't dangerous. Only a defective gun is not dangerous.
Re:A Better Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
> How about we actually fucking teach kids about guns, how they work, and what they're used for?
We gave up on actually fucking teaching kids anything some time ago now.
Re:A Better Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
How about we actually fucking teach kids about guns, how they work, and what they're used for? That would do a hell of a lot more to curtail gun-related deaths
While we're at it, can we get Hollywood celebrities to hold guns properly on film? Don't stick your finger into the trigger guard until you're ready to destroy something.
Seriously. I understand that Hollywood movies aren't gun safety tutorials and that, for instance, Will Smith has to whip out his gun and use it to mock-threaten his daughter's boyfriend in Bad Boys 2, but if these celebrities kept their fingers pointed down the barrel instead of resting on the trigger, it might make a difference when some drunk dumbass decides to imitate them. Drives me nuts whenever I see this on film/TV.
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While we're at it, can we get Hollywood celebrities to hold guns properly on film? Don't stick your finger into the trigger guard until you're ready to destroy something.
I really do appreciate it when I see TV shows actually get this one right.
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How about we actually fucking teach kids about guns, how they work, and what they're used for? That would do a hell of a lot more to curtail gun-related deaths, and without the (un)intended side effect of rendering personal protection weapons useless by legislative fiat.
Not to totally poo-poo the idea, but I'm pretty sure kids accidentally shooting other kids with guns know how guns work and usually what they're used for. That's the entire problem. You're dealing with children who are mentally immature. They understand what guns are used for, they simply don't have the mental processes yet to distinguish what is appropriate and what isn't. Kids who aim a gun at another kid and pull the trigger know guns are used for shooting people, but because they're 7 years old they don
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Which, presumably, is why we have upwards of 10,000,000 accidental shootings every year.
Oh, wait, we don't, do we?
Note that the number of accidental shootings we have every year suggests that the number of "lax about safety" gun owners is less than 0.1%....
Re:A Better Idea (Score:4, Interesting)
I grew up in a house with many firearms that I had access to, I knew where they were and where the ammo was. I was never inclined to play with them. If I wanted to go out shooting, I'd let my dad know and we'd go out when we had time. I was given a .22 LR for Christmas when I was 6, but was told and knew that even though it is mine, I can only use it when my dad was around (my mom has shot, she's OK with guns, but she's not a gun person).
Never had a problem, I was raised right.
Hell, I was even bullied pretty hard in elementary school, and friendless since I lived in the wrong part of town to be going to that school. Getting even sure crossed my mind, but having been raised right and thinking things through I faced the endless escalation that may result, and wound up realizing that whatever happened I could kill any of these kids causing me problems. I didn't want to, obviously I never did, but there it was. A little kid realizing that they had the capability to use lethal force wantonly, and also realizing they had the responsibility to never do so except in the defense of life.
It actually turned out well, having those guns where I could get to them. I did have to grab a shotgun one time when I was about 12, because some guys my idiot-asshole cousin owed money to found out we were related and came looking for him. They didn't believe he wasn't at my house and tried to just open the door and walk in to look for him, after I told them he wasn't here, and to leave, and closed the door on them (they're 17-18, what's some preteen gonnOH SHIT SHOTGUN!).
One of the most terrifying moments of my life, honestly. Not that they might have meant me harm, or could have caused me harm -- that simply wasn't going to happen, and I was afraid of what I would need to do to make sure that wasn't going to happen.
That somehow turned into a story, not sure how.
SkyFAIL! (Score:2, Funny)
Credit to the Bond Film that did it first (Score:2)
Yet another ham-handed attempt to eliminate guns (Score:2)
Cops will not like this (Score:3)
Police chiefs, who are politicians, will be in favor of this, because they think it's good politics. Police unions, representing working cops on the streets will be unalterably opposed to it, because even 99% isn't good enough when your life is on the line.
Re:Cops will not like this (Score:4, Insightful)
because even 99% isn't good enough
The Glock 17 9mm regularly used by police forces is rated at having less than 20 malfunctions in the first 10,000 rounds; that's 1/500... which is 99.8%
So, you are correct that 99% isn't good enough, but 99.8% is.
Thus if someone were to release a smart gun tech that kept its false negative rate (preventing legitimate fire rate) low enough that the gun retains its 99.8% effectiveness rating, then it would be good enough.
Police unions, representing working cops on the streets will be unalterably opposed to it, because even 99% isn't good enough when your life is on the line.
This old chestnut. "your life is on the line". Its life or death, and we have to do everything we can possibly do to ensure a positive outcome.
That's why police have an annual proficiency review. Remember their life is on the line. A few hours once a year is good enough to ensure they are in top shape, right?
And what's more that proficiency test has the very high standard of 70% to get a pass. Remember their life is on the line, or the life of their partner... or perhaps even your life. You want to know the gun he's holding is going to fire when he pulls the trigger right? That's paramount right? That he's proficient with the firearm, well, 70% is "pretty good" right?
Funny how 99% isn't good enough for the gun, but 70% is good enough for the guy holding it.
How about instead of more laws (Score:4, Insightful)
One word against this idea: gloves ... in winter. (Score:5, Insightful)
Cops in Minnesota in the dead of a winter snowstorm are just gonna LOVE this tech.
Next steps (Score:3)
So you want my guns to be "smart" and place a small computer of some sort in there. And in the event that that small computer has been rendered ineffective, my gun will no longer fire. Is this computer going to have Bluetooth or Wi-Fi? Is the government going to force manufacturers to install a backdoor so the government can decide when I can and cannot fire my weapon? What if my gun (and/or me) are electrocuted? What if there is an EMP? What if my house is struck by lightening and the electricity goes into my gun safe, rendering all of my guns useless? What if....
How many cops would this save? (Score:4, Insightful)
No more criminals stealing service revolvers from cops and shooting them with their own weapons.
Still shady dealers selling weapons without "smart" tech, or with overrideable tech.
LET THE CHILDREN DIE ALREADY (Score:4, Informative)
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That's the problem with "Think of the children": not enough Darwin Awards.
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Double standards (Score:2)
DRM on movies and music = good, DRM on guns = bad?
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DRM on movies and music = good, DRM on guns = bad?
Jim Wallace is a spokesman for the Massachusetts Gun Owners Action League, not the MAFIAA.
Great until... (Score:2, Insightful)
Furthermore, it would encourage people to
A first (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm very much against guns but I find myself agreeing with the guy from the NRA on this issue.
Also, it's pretty obvious that the gun in Skyfall only had this "feature" so it could be exploited in a (way too predictable and pretty lame) plot twist.
Oh My (Score:3)
Millions are spent every year in studies and consulting services, and the idea comes from a James Bond movie??!!! What's wrong with you people!!!!
This needs to be field tested before it's law (Score:4, Insightful)
I see so many opportunities for this going wrong, like if your hands are dirty. A large percentage of gun deaths are suicides and this would do nothing to stop that.
How about we have the military filed test this first and then see about make it mandatory?
So finance R&D and we can talk about it (Score:3)
You can't mandate a technology that doesn't exist or isn't practical. So invent it before you make it law.
I think such a requirement if made into law should be found to violate the 2nd amendment. But I do want the option of such technology so what you could do is mandate the availably of the tech for all new firearm models. Kind of like requiring automobiles be made with seat belts but not requiring people to use them.
Ludicrous (Score:4)
"Lets take untested bullshit tech that causes a myriad of failures, and MANDATE IT ON ALL WEAPONS!!!"
Also this will make guns super expensive.
And nonfunctional.
And EMP vulnerable.
No, this idea is horrible. I'm sure there's some people who would like this on their guns, but for right now not even all police departments are on board (and they are the one group of people who would actually benefit, as police are sometimes attacked with their own weapons).
This is such a ludicrous power grab. They are taking a virgin tech and trying to make it MANDATORY. Obviously, no one will allow this to go live, so then they'll go cry about how the "NRA is a bunch of villains who only care about the gun industry".
Dirty, dirty politics at work. Bastards.
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Which really isn't the point. While you certainly don't want the weapon going off when you don't want it to, it is something that absolutely needs to work when you do need it. Most weapons are designed to make them easier to maintain and operate, with some sort of safety mechanism. Most mechanical safeties are reliable and fairly simple to operate, but something requiring processing is not as likely to be as reliable.
If the edge case you are protecting against poses a serious chance of making the weapon
Re:But I like guns! (Score:5, Insightful)
Since Obama took office, the percentage of violations of current background check laws which were prosecuted has fallen.
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I don't like guns, I've never seen a gun, clueless (Score:2)
I'll tell you what, I don't watch clueless comedy central comedians doing fake news, and I don't know anything about comedians who do fake news, so I won't try to make the rules about comedians doing fake news. I'll leave that to you, since you probably watch those shows a lot more than I do and you know more about the subject. In turn, you can leave the gun rules to people who
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This isn't exactly sensible gun control. A reliable gun is a necessity for gun safety. You give people the false impression of safety and the ignorant and foolish will take additional risks.
Sensible gun control involves things like universal background checks and mandatory firearm safety and local self defense law tests/training.
Re:But I like guns! (Score:4, Insightful)
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perhaps the mandate should be for cigarettes too, since that's their purpose. well, not exactly their reason for existing, but their usual consequence.
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I would want it implemented like my laptop's fingerprint reader. Only stored locally or on a machine I control (IE: gun owner's PC) and can be overridden with a password (may require a Bluetooth link to a PC)
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Trigger locks would do the same as this bill and would be cheap to retrofit, etc.
This again?
Are you aware of the significant safety hazards that retrofitted trigger locks present?
To illustrate - take an ordinary revolver. Unload it, and install a trigger lock (the lock goes though the trigger guard, in front of the trigger). Yay, safety, right?
Consider that there is NOTHING which prevents someone from loading such a weapon, and cocking the hammer. Oh, and by the way, you can't decock it without being able to access the trigger. You now have a weapon that is in an unsafe condition, t
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Re:Terrific idea (Score:4, Insightful)
Like a previous poster said, if law enforcement adopts the technology and it turns out to be extremely reliable I'll reconsider.
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Common Laws and Common Sense (Score:5, Interesting)
That's part of the problem with this debate, indeed with our current system. That is, not that you personally are unfamiliar with guns and do not have a use for them. You have a life of your own and come from a different culture than I do, and I do not blame or begrudge you that. The problem with the debate is the demand that you and I should be able to come up with a uniform legal system which both of us find agreeable and neither of us find oppressive. You say, " A child never has to hold a gun for any reason". I grew up in a culture where not having guns around is unthinkable, where the chief means of ensuring gun safety is teaching children to respect them, where we never touched them without permission partly because we knew what they could do and partly because we knew with supervision we would be allowed. I was considered old enough to shoot a gun for the first time while I was still young enough that my grandfather stood behind me lest the kick should knock me down.
Your experience is as alien to me as mine is to you. Put simply, lacking common experience we do not share and cannot share any notion of common sense. In practical terms, a country the size of ours is many different cultures, foreign to one another to a greater or lesser extent, all under one polity. I would have subsidiarity [wikipedia.org] be a guiding principle in this debate. Common laws ought only to be made on a level where there is a shared common sense.
Re:Just wow (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, that is foolish as fuck. People like you are why so many children die in gun accidents. Congratulations, you are part of the problem.
Here is why: A majority of US households have guns. While many guns are stored safely, many are not. By failing to educate your children about gun safety, you make them susceptible to accidental death or injury when they play with real guns someone finds in a neighbor's house.
The NRA puts out gun safety material for children which is quite appropriate. "Stop! Don't touch! Leave the area! Tell an adult!" Even if you can't stand guns, hate guns, and would never touch one or want one or use one, you owe it to your children to teach them this much.
LF
My First Rifle (Score:3)
Obviously you've never heard of the "My First Rifle" which is a company that makes real guns for kids. A 5 year old accidentally shot his 2yr old sister in Kentucky just recently, go look it up. It's a real .22 rifle, was loaded with bullets and everything. They even make 'em in pink for girls.
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Obviously you've never heard of the "My First Rifle" which is a company that makes real guns for kids. A 5 year old accidentally shot his 2yr old sister in Kentucky just recently, go look it up. It's a real .22 rifle, was loaded with bullets and everything. They even make 'em in pink for girls.
So? Does that absolve the parents from responsibility of the actions of their charges (i.e., children)? Of course not, only a moron (or troll with an agenda) would ever even attempt to come to such a conclusion.
My brother bought his son a 410/22 combo for his 6th birthday, but he doesn't just leave the fuckin' thing lying around where the kid can access it at any time. The difference between my anecdote and yours? The adult in mine isn't an irresponsible fucking idiot.
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I disagree. I have been shooting from the time I was about 6. Moving from BB guns to 22 rifles to large bore rifles and handguns.
It was a fun, educational, and enjoyable experience and provided me a means to connect with my parents/grandparents and kept me outdoors and engaged.
Kids should be shooting, but in controlled and well supervised environments. I was taught to respect firearms and to understand their danger and their utility. That is what should be done.
However, I do agree that parents who do not se
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And yet, violence is at a 40-year low, while levels of firearms ownership is at an all-time high. Meanwhile, many of those other "1st world countries" are experiencing continuing increases in crime rates (UK, most of Western Europe, Australia...).
The facts speak for themselves. We can both spit numbers at each other all day long, but at the end of the day, nearly every major genocide in the last hundred years has been perpetrated on an unarmed population. Would that happen here? I don't know, talk to th
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Hell, replace the handgun with anything dangerous a idiot parent might leave out or let a kid play with.
Brian was about to head home for dinner, his best friend was playing in his mom's car and accidentally placed it in neutral causing it to run Brian over.
Brian was about to head home for dinner, his best friend was playing with his mom's chef knife and accidentally stabbed Brian in the neck pretending to be a sword fighter.
Brian was about to head home for dinner, his best friend was playing with his mom's