Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Can an equipment vendor reclaim its leased press from your shop if it objects to what you're printing?



Further to my post of 29 April/13 http://vicg8.blogspot.ca/2013/04/3d-printed-weapons-producer-says-hes.html ), it seems that, besides issues of gun control and civil rights, Cody Wilson’s use of 3D-printing technology to manufacture firearms also raises an issue of censorship.  

The background here is that, when Mr. Wilson's organization, Defense Distributed, first started using 3D printers to make gun parts, the 3D-printer manufacturer Stratasys cancelled Mr. Wilson’s lease on one of their machines.

So does this scenario mean that if:
  1. you’re a manufacturer of printing presses, and
  2. I’m a printer, and
  3. you don’t happen to like the content of a particular job I’m running on a press that I’ve leased from you or you think the content is illegal:
Then you automatically have the legal right to pull your press out of my shop?

What does everybody think?

Monday, April 29, 2013

3D-printed weapons producer prepares to print world’s first complete working handgun


Last week University of Texas law student Cody Wilson told the Inside 3D Printing Conference in New York that within the next few weeks he will successfully produce a working handgun with 3D printing technology.  The weapon is expected to be capable of firing at least a few shots before breaking or melting and will be printed in 12 parts using ABS+, a sturdy, conventional 3D-printed thermoplastic.  In addition to its 3D-printed components, the gun will also require one small metal firing pin and conventional ammunition.

Mr. Wilson is founder and director of Defense Distributed (DefDist), a controversial non-profit he established last year to explore the possibility of manufacturing weapons with 3D printers.   Mr. Wilson calls his mission the "Wiki Weapon Project". In 2012, DefDist 3D-printed a lower receiver for an AR-15 rifle.  Earlier this year it 3D-printed a 30-round AR-15 magazine, besides obtaining a U.S. federal arms licence.  For some time other gun enthusiasts have been conducting similar experiments (e.g., see my blog post of 31 July 2012 http://vicg8.blogspot.ca/2012/07/gun-enthusiast-uses-3d-printer-to-make.html ).

After printing and testing his new 3D-printed gun, Mr. Wilson plans to upload his model files to the Internet so that anyone else can print one.  Debates are already exploding (pardon the pun) on government, legal, and social-media forums over the implications of these pending developments for gun control and civil rights.

One sample discussion can be found on LinkedIn's Disruptive Print Group at:  http://www.linkedin.com/groupItem?view=&gid=4638740&type=member&item=236917411&qid=4ce61fb7-c586-47f5-913a-d5d6d9ebe4b8&trk=group_most_popular-0-b-ttl&goback=%2Egmp_4638740
As of 3 May 2013, participates universally expressed the hope that 3D printing technology will be used for good not evil.

  I conclude that it's probably better to focus on its more constructive applications; for example, in the housing and fashion fields, cars, prosthetics for amputees, and implants for reconstructive surgery (see links below). 

Links on Cody Wilson and Defense Distributed:

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Prominent Egyptian blogger released from jail

Egyptian authorities have freed blogger Abdel Kareem Nabil Soliman (a.k.a. Kareem Amer) after 4 years in prison. Soliman’s case has highlighted issues of freedom of speech on the Internet and social media, where censorship is harder to enforce.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11789637
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/17/abdel-kareem-nabil-egypti_n_784806.html