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Government United States The Courts

20 US States Want to Stop the Posting of Blueprints For 3D-Printed Guns (abc7ny.com) 382

An anonymous reader quotes the Associated Press: Attorneys general in 20 states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit Thursday challenging a federal regulation that could allow blueprints for making guns on 3D printers to be posted on the internet.

New York Attorney General Tish James, who helped lead the coalition of state attorneys general, argued that posting the blueprints would allow anyone to go online and use the downloadable files to create unregistered and untraceable assault-style weapons that could be difficult to detect... Proponents have argued there is a constitutional right to publish the material, but critics counter that making the blueprints readily accessible online could lead to an increase in gun violence and put weapons in the hands of criminals who are legally prohibited from owning them... For years, law enforcement officials have been trying to draw attention to the dangers posed by the so-called ghost guns, which contain no registration numbers that could be used to trace them.

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20 US States Want to Stop the Posting of Blueprints For 3D-Printed Guns

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  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @09:38PM (#59659054) Homepage

    Gonna hafta download from abroad then. What kind of idiocy is this? Have these people ever used the Internet?

    • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @10:15PM (#59659158)

      Gonna hafta download from abroad then. What kind of idiocy is this? Have these people ever used the Internet?

      The Defense Distributed files are available for download from lots of sites. The company posted the files on their website but Pennsylvania wrote a law making them illegal in that state, so DD pulled them from everywhere. You can pay a small fee for a branded USB stick with the files on them. They serve no purpose other than being a "happening" collective.

      You are correct that 3D "blueprints" are available on the 'net, but there's an insignificant interest in them.

      3D printers are not cheap, they are a pain in the ass, and the total process produces a hazardous time bomb.

    • by koavf ( 1099649 )
      You can have laws in places, even with the Internet existing.
  • Go to Amazon and download any of the homemade firearms/ammunition books by Ronald Brown or others. A half an hour at Home Depot and Lowe's and you're pretty much done with a usable firearm.
    • Addendum: Here's a great post [thefirearmblog.com] about how to build a break-action single shot shotgun. The kind that Joe Biden said you should just use to blast into the air if someone's threatening your home. And it fires 12 GA shells - which you can also make at home [primalsurvivor.net]. A trio of people with a trio of single-shot shotguns and a lot of ammunition could keep up a pretty stout barrage: one firing, and two reloading, should allow a shot every few seconds without issue.
  • Tough Shit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by registrations_suck ( 1075251 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @09:48PM (#59659068)

    Every freedom has consequences.

  • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @09:52PM (#59659082)
    Just 3D print your own bullet proof storm trooper armor [slashdot.org] and there’s nothing to worry about. The defense is already ahead of the curve on this one.
  • Send a self addressed envelope and $.99 and get a usb drive with a 3d printer file.
  • by physicsphairy ( 720718 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @09:56PM (#59659096)

    Proponents have argued there is a constitutional right to publish the material, but critics counter that making the blueprints readily accessible online could lead to an increase in gun violence and put weapons in the hands of criminals who are legally prohibited from owning them...

    That is not a "counter" to the claim of having a constitutional right. A counter would be some evidence that it isn't a constitutional right. Otherwise, just kindly agree that publishing the information is constitutionally protected and make your argument for amending the constitution. If the claim is "we recognize it is a constitutional right but think the government should ignore that because we don't like it" then you ought not to be involved in this legal process or any other. Makes this a handy list of twenty AGs who should be removed.

    For years, law enforcement officials have been trying to draw attention to the dangers posed by the so-called ghost guns, which contain no registration numbers that could be used to trace them.

    Excellent, now you can tell us how many people have been killed by "ghost guns" over the course of the these years of them being an apparent threat. Must be quite a few if we are discussing purposely violating the supreme law of the land in our desperation to stop it. How many is it?

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      That is not a "counter" to the claim of having a constitutional right. A counter would be some evidence that it isn't a constitutional right. Otherwise, just kindly agree that publishing the information is constitutionally protected and make your argument for amending the constitution

      I think there's a reasonable argument to be made that distributing the plans to 3D-print a gun is similar to selling or giving a gun. I don't think that holds up, but IMO it's the right thing to be debating. We all know it's pointless to try to prevent distribution of bits, but that's never stopped governments from trying.

      A less reasonable argument, one I can see no support for, is that distributing the designs makes you a gun manufacturer. That's the kind of argument that a government blatantly stepping

  • Why not just buy one for less than the cost of the printer?
  • by gl4ss ( 559668 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @10:11PM (#59659142) Homepage Journal

    it talks about freely trading, acquiring, training and equipping a private military.

    clearly that has not been allowed for decades (nearing 1 century already), you're not allowed to have armaments that are just that, armaments.

    So just change it. would clear up a lot of the confusion - or start adhering to it.

    granted, they didn't think there would be armaments as powerful we have now but they did have what they considered battleships, cannons etc when they penned that as armaments, in what was then private hands - but just because it's an amendment to the constitution does not actually mean that it could not be changed if the houses agreed to it. This whole ongoing thing reminds me of a fiasco member of parliament in Finland who said out a very stupid thing that you shouldn't change a law because it's the law, while having been elected to an institution which has 1 main purpose and that 1 main purpose is to change the law(constitution as well for which said institution has defined a process for)

    in how many of those states is it currently legal to build your own gun though? surely in quite many of them? furthermore you can just go to a hw store and get everything necessary for a zip gun anyways and ammo as well?

    anyway, wouldn't it be a bit ass backwards if it's legal to create and register a gun but not tell anyone what the parts look like?

    • of the historic context of the 2nd amendment, and I haven't had the energy to go digging deep into the history myself. There was a _lot_ of gun control back in the day. So it's safe to say the framers didn't intend for it to be open season on weapons. And I don't think you'll find anyone that says you should have any arm that isn't banned by international convention. If I start building a nuke in my backyard I'm gonna get a visit from the FBI & CIA.

      In any case it's a wedge issue. I'd prefer to let i
    • You can actually order everything as parts and assemble it, it’s not substantially traced at all. The only controlled piece is the receiver, but they sell “unfinished blanks” anyone can use a hand drill on and have a fully functioning untraced weapon. This is legal in the majority of states and is far more capable than any 3-D printed part that’s not post machined, I don’t even consider plastic receivers to be a viable weapon, metal 3-D printers (not the crappy sand cast ones
    • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @10:44PM (#59659260) Journal

      granted, they didn't think there would be armaments as powerful we have now but they did have what they considered battleships, cannons etc when they penned that as armaments, in what was then private hands

      This bears repeating. The second amendment was very clearly seen by the Founding Fathers as including artillery and the like. Later, in the days when a machine gun was a cannon-sized Gatling gun, they were all in private hands. The US Army around the Spanish-American war (c1898) had made some very poor procurement decisions, and our soldiers were simply outgunned. But a bunch of people brought their own private Gatling guns, and these personally-owned machine guns became key to the fighting, with some historians calling it the invention of the now-standard concept of "base of fie and maneuver element", once the artillery corps figured out not to use them like cannon.

      It was only in the 1920s, when prohibition caused machine-gun armed gang violence, that people started claiming that the second amendment didn't protect machine guns or other "military weapons", after 150 years of it very clearly doing so!

      We certainly shouldn't be blocking any kind of small arm in private hands, not without actually amending the constitution! But the government simply ignoring the constitution to appease public outcry is nothing new, I guess.

      • The very first gun control laws were meant to keep blacks from defending themselves.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          Sure, I think that's well established. And Democrats are still advocating those same laws today they were back then. But I'm talking about the argument that "the Founding Fathers never meant for the Second Amendment to include military weapons", which is 100% bullshit. The American Revolution started when the government tried to seize cannon that were in the hands of private citizens; of course it was meant to include military equipment.

        • The very first gun control laws were meant to keep blacks from defending themselves.

          I'm fairly certain that this is still the intention of gun control today. Just listen to Mike Bloomberg talk.
          https://www.washingtontimes.co... [washingtontimes.com]

    • It doesn't make any difference if you think the 2nd is talking individual rights or something like National Guard. The second *is* about ARMS. Individuals can't own artillery. I do not know the actual rules but I'm pretty sure that National Guard of any State doesn't have operational control of nukes. Nukes and artillery are ARMS darn it, but distinctions are made, thank God. The Second talks about ARMS, yet arms ain't arms always in practice so change the practice or change the Second.

  • Blah blah blah.

    PROVE IT!

    Offer something other than your stupid, uninformed decisions you tyrannical fuckheads!

  • Since day one when Cody Wilson released the files for his 'Liberator' the media and their, largely democrat, allies within the government have bellowed pronouncements of doom over 3D printed guns. Pronouncements that rival the most ridiculous claims out there of what could happen due to climate change. But unlike even that issue, were we have some obvious data on environmental damage, there's never been any significant problems that have arisen from home-made guns of any type. Which is not to say there h
    • Perhaps they think that by making a stand on 3D printed guns they can distract the public from thinking about all the massacres that occur due to lax gun control of ... actual guns?

    • Heck, go get the plans to the original FP-45 [scribd.com] Liberator pistol as used in WWII. No 3D printer needed, just basic hand tools could be used.
      • I'm surprised that anyone that would consider building a 3d printed gun wouldn't just go the next step and build a sten. Didn't they literally build those things in bicycle shops? Even as bad as they supposedly were they're probably better than a printed gun.
  • by 278MorkandMindy ( 922498 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @10:20PM (#59659178)

    You can already get unregistered guns easily, the US has no appreciable gun control. Except for 3D printed ones.

    Idiocy.

    • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      At least it's not like the stupidity up here in Canada. Where you can still buy a .223 rifle with a 5 round cap. But an 'AR15' is going to be illegal. What's the difference between the two? The AR15 is black, also has a pistol grip. That's it. But why? Because "gun violence" is the claim, but the feds have no fucking care to actually deal with the problem.

      There's been 6 shootings in Canada with stolen .223's. The vast majority of our gun crime comes from, gangs in major cities, having shootouts with

  • ... include damming up the Indian ocean.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @10:29PM (#59659214)
    It's a losing issue. True, I mostly see it coming from "New Democrats" (e.g. the right wing of the Democratic party, think Mike Bloomberg & Joe Biden) but there's way more important issues. Healthcare, ending the wars, clean air & water, etc, etc.

    It's tempting because polls show Americans want more gun control, but it doesn't matter what Americans want, what matters is what _voters_ want. People don't vote on the issue of gun control. Drop it. You'll save more lives with Medicare for All, Federal Jobs programs like the "Green" New Deal & ending those stupid wars.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The last person we should listen to about gun control is Joe Biden. After all, he told us to take a double barrel shotgun and blast it in the air [snopes.com] to scare away people, which is illegal in pretty much every single jurisdiction in the US.

      As far as Bernie, he's way out there [berniesanders.com] with regards to firearms. What is an "assault weapon" and what is a "high capacity" magazine? He also wants to ban 3D printing of firearms.

      He's a nut, without any real clue about firearms, and wants to take away the rights of citizens

      • The last person we should listen to about gun control is Joe Biden. After all, he told us to take a double barrel shotgun and blast it in the air [snopes.com] to scare away people, which is illegal in pretty much every single jurisdiction in the US.

        If you're scaring away an intruder, there's a very good chance you'll be perfectly within your legal right [wikipedia.org] to do so by firing your shotgun into the air, regardless of what local ordinances say about the matter. Also, if you're going to fire a weapon into the air, far better a shotgun than just about anything else.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      You think anyone on the left will ever notice that it's the black kid who doesn't have a father at home because dad is serving time on a gun charge? It's not the white kid.

    • by Nkwe ( 604125 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @11:38PM (#59659400)

      It's a losing issue.

      Or at least let gun registration go. Personally I have no issue with background checks, what I have an issue with is registration or the creation of any sort of database about who has what guns. If we made a simple system where if you want to buy a gun, you go and get a gun purchase license, which requires a background check. Once you get that license it is good for a year (or some reasonable length of time). If you already have a concealed carry permit, it would work as license (since clearly you would have had a background check.) Next put the responsibility on anyone selling a gun to ask for the license. Maybe even have a toll free number to call to ask if a license is still valid and not revoked. Have no requirement to record the serial number or the sale. Make it a severe penalty (felony) to sell a gun to someone without seeing their license. To enforce at the problem areas like gun shows, have federal "secret shoppers" try and purchase guns without having to show a license. I would go for a system like this and I bet a bunch of second amendment crowd would as well. It would provide a reasonable solution to what gun control people *say* they want - ensure guns aren't sold to those who are not entitled to own a gun; and it would prevent the hidden agenda that gun control people don't talk about - the registration of all guns so that someday they can be more easily confiscated.

      • Buying a gun already requires a background check.

        It's apparent you have never bought a gun. They do call a number, the FBI.

        > I bet a bunch of second amendment crowd would as well

        Once upon a time. Now? No. We have basically what you are asking for. What will these new laws do? After decades of compromise and rationalization like yours it is never enough. There is always one more law. Regardless of how effective that law is or if existing laws are even followed. Will it stop suicides? Will it stop gang vio

      • Your response, Nkwe, is right on the money. It's hilarious because what you have described is kinda close to how it currently works. You probably didn't mean to but you kinda laid it all out....

        First, the database issue is resolved. The Firearm Owners Protection Act (1986) explicitly restricts the government from creating a list of gun owners and the guns they own. That's a done deal already.

        Second, if the gun is being sold by a Federal Firearms Licensed dealer (ie: an FFL license holder) then the
  • The regulations are about export. An honest Federal judiciary would dismiss the state claims for lack of standing. And failure to state a claim of action. "Someone might use this information to do something illegal in our state, therefore the Federal Government has a duty to ban it" is not a real legal principal, and even if it were, it would be precluded by the First Amendment (we don't even _need_ to bring the Second into it).

    • "Someone might use this information to do something illegal in our state, therefore the Federal Government has a duty to ban it" is not a real legal principal, and even if it were, it would be precluded by the First Amendment.

      Not to mention the even more obvious fact that no export of the blueprints would have taken place if someone in their state downloaded them. The regulations in question involve export to foreign countries. So the issue of people doing illegal things in these particular states doesn't intersect at all with the issue of international exports. That's an even stronger reason why the states have no standing.

  • It's completely legal for you to build a gun using plans, or improvising your own. It has been pretty much forever. The DoJ agrees it's completely legal to print a gun using a 3D printer, as long as you follow all other regulations (no fully automatic machine guns, silencers need a tax stamp, etc...) So, I'm not sure what the lawsuit is all about. To be successful they are going to have to argue that somehow printing a gun is different than building one from parts, which is settled caselaw to be legal.

  • These assholes have no respect for individual rights. They violate the Second Amendment with their laws against the keeping and bearing of arms, then they violate the First Amendment with their attempts to prevent people from communicating on how to build weapons, and doing their best to prevent Second Amendment advocates from assembling peacefully.

    What is also amazing to me is they don't have any idea on how any of this even works. This is closing the barn door after the horses have fled. People have be

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Tailhook ( 98486 )

      Make no mistake that the people behind this are far in the majority members of the Democrat Party.

      The list of party states is all the usual blue state suspects; Illinois, California, New York, etc.

      This isn't even about guns. There is no homebrew gun crime wave happening. Printed guns aren't even capable of facilitating a mass shooting. It's just the usual leftest need to impose their will and force people to submit. Does't matter if it actually solves any problems or creates more problems, as long as they win.

  • Have shown us they can't focus on real problems. Or they've shown us they have too many people on payroll if they can find time for this meaningless nonsense.

    If you thought your government was competent, this story should be a wake up call.

  • I have a small youtube channel. Someone wanted to higher me to design 3D weapon. Isn't there enough means to kill people already?
  • You say to someone, "Here's a machine that can fabricate just about anything. What do you want to make with it?"

    It's sadly predictable that all Americans seem to want to make is guns.

    America's foreign policy is dominated by bombing or threats of bombing, including war crimes (almost all administrations, Democrat & Republican, going back decades), committed either directly or through a proxy government or militia.

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday January 26, 2020 @11:55PM (#59659442)
    Because 3D printers are basically the first iteration of the replicators postulated in Star Trek. Computers and their ability to replicate software (programs, data, photos, audio, video) revolutionized how software was created, distributed, and restricted. In the same way, the ability of 3D printers to fabricate nearly any material object will revolutionize how products are created, distributed, and restricted. If you give the government the green-light to restrict guns (which are explicitly protected by the U.S. Constitution), you're also green-lighting the government's ability to restrict anything that they want (most things aren't explicitly protected by the Constitution). Where would be today if the government had banned e-books, MP3, scanners, sand digital movies and TV shows when the digital revolution was just beginning?

    That's not to say such restrictions are wrong. Just that we're entering completely uncharted territory, and need to think extremely carefully about how we wish to proceed. The restrictions we decide to allow now will set a precedent and have far-reaching consequences for decades to come. We need to make these decisions after debate and consideration commensurate to the decades of consequences we'll be creating. These decisions can't be made in the heat of the moment as a knee-jerk reaction to fear.
  • "For years, law enforcement officials have been trying to draw attention to the dangers ..." ...of allowing the public to film them when they beat up black citizens.

  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Monday January 27, 2020 @11:26AM (#59660904)

    First - Guns are legal
    Second - Making your own gun is legal and requires no serial #
    Third - 3D printed guns don't work. By all means proceed to youtube and watch them fail*
    Four - People who aren't allowed to own guns can purchase them from individuals all day long.
    Five - The Constitution doesn't permit the government to prevent citizens from publishing materials.
    Six - These things are all over the internet, never stopped being all over the internet, and aren't likely to go away anytime soon regardless of how much FUD these windbags want to spread.

    *3D printed guns using consumer level technology. 3d printed guns with sintering and commercial metal printing technologies have done better but at that point it is cheaper and easier to reproduce them the old fashioned way

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