Monday, March 18, 2013
The technology of the bodhisattva is also available to the wayward. If you don't think we're in a race against time, read on. -A.T.
SXSW: 'Wiki Weapons' Maker Says 3D Printed Guns 'Are Going To Be Possible Forever'
By Joshua Ostroff. Huffington Post: 03/13/2013 2:45 pm EDT
The takeaway from SXSW Interactive, the massive annual technology conference in Austin, Texas, is that this year got away from social media (finally) and started delving into the physical realm, in particular the coming 3D printer revolution.
But for all the wonderful possibilities that we were told this new technology portends, there was one which was somewhat more ominous — the creation of 3D printed guns.
“What does it mean to have a have a file that could be readily be assembled by a machine into a firearm?” asked Wilson to a surprisingly small crowd (or maybe not that surprising considering there was a Google Glasses demo down the hall). “Is that [file] by itself a firearm? Is it just data? Is it just speech? Where is the offense?” Though he did admit, “it’s not a book; it can become something, so it’s a grey area.”
Now here’s the thing about Wilson. He seems to be an extremely intelligent law student, well-versed in political and philosophical thought (even quoting 19th-century French thinker Pierre-Joseph Proudhon) as well as the intricacies of technology that would make most of us blanche. He is also a self-declared anarchist and a lover of firearms. He will probably be underestimated, and that perhaps will be at our peril.
Wilson’s SXSW talk, which featured just him and some slides, attempted to lay out the relatively short lifespan of the so-called wiki weapon project. A 3D printer is able to digitize an object and then rebuild a replica of that object using resins and polymers. Defense Distributed began as, essentially, a “university project” but once Wilson got push-back, it went from being a hobby to being a serious undertaking.
He recounts how a major 3D printer company rented him a high-end machine and then, when they found out what he was using it for, not only took it from him but criminally referred him to the the bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
“They didn’t just try and put a kibosh on my project, they tried to mortally wound me,” Wilson said, sounding as bitter as you could imagine. In the process, it seems, they turned what was something of a lark into a life’s mission.
Though crowdfunding site IndieGoGo took Defense Distributed’s gun-printing project down after complaints, they still managed to raise $20,000 via Paypal, proving that this is more than the work of a, shall we say, lone gunman.
“Not only can we be successfully defensive with this project, that we can pivot and wrap around the laws quickly, but we realized we can actually go on the offensive with this project,” he said.
Congress has noticed what Wilson is up to, with Rep. Steve Israel sponsoring legislation to prevent 3D guns. “He saw an opportunity, ‘3D printed guns are upon us. Let’s legislate them away. Be gone, be gone!’” Wilson mocked, before boasting his files have already been downloaded 440,000 times. “Does he think law enforcement should have the power to affect your ability to find files on Google?”
Wilson, who doesn’t “view government as a benign institution,” argued these efforts would be ultimately futile. “[Israel] thinks this is how we’re all going to rid ourselves of wiki-weapons, and that’s false,” he said, noting that the industry-friendly law is written to apply to individuals, not gun manufacturers. “We’ve applied for a federal firearms manufacturing license.”
He also said they’ve been working on printing magazines. “It’s a box with a spring, and you can make it. This put us over with the firearms community. They were very ambivalent about us, especially the NRA types, that might seem hard to believe, but when magazines were on the chopping block and we said, ‘look, you could make one of these tonight for $15,’ the point was driven home.”
He noted his reason for naming the printable magazine software after Dianne Feinstein — the democratic senator who spearheaded the 1994 assault weapons ban — was that he hoped to associate the two forever. “That’s power,” he said.
After the Sandy Hook massacre, all of Defense Distributed’s gun files got taken down from Makerbot’s “Thingiverse,” a clearinghouse site for the 3D printer community. While this clearly angered Wilson, he also acknowledged that the Newtown elementary school shooting had turned his project into “a political football.”
What was perhaps most disquieting about Wilson’s talk was how much he sounded like the kids who founded Napster, except of course that, despite occasional claims against heavy metal, nobody believes music can kill anyone. Guns, not so much. But Wilson, in his evangelism, refuses to acknowledge that even as he boasts that once his tech is proven and let loose in the wild, that genie won’t go back in its bottle.
“We can pantomime a legislative solution,” he sneered, “but this is going to be possible forever -- and I'm interested in creating that world.”
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Obstacles to the Warrior
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