A decision from the US Department of Justice allows the online distribution of computer-designed gun models.
Looking back:Cody Wilson,the founder of Defense Distributed,created and fired the first fully 3-D-printed gun in 2013.The gun’s design files,which he uploaded on his website Defcad.com,were downloaded hunders of thousands of times in a few days.
The news: In 2015,Wilson and his lawyers files a lawsuit which claimed that by stopping him from uploading his 3-D-printable model,the State Department violated his right to bear arms and to freely share information.Two months ago,the Department of Justice quietly offered a settlement to Wolison,essentially agreeing with his argument.Somewhere in between then and now,Wilson evidently accepted.
What is means: Digital weapons files can now be distributed on the web without regulation.Wilson is relaunching Defcad.com on August 1.The website will host the original 3-D-printing gun model along with new designs that require machining by programmable manufacturing machines,like CNCs,to produce.Users will be able to contribute their own models as well.”What’s about to happen is a Cambrian explosion of the digital content related to firearms, ”Wilson told Wired,
But makers will need to have a working knowledge of gun mechanics,3-D printing,and manufacturing technologies like CNCs to construct a weapon from these files.While Wilsion has lowered some of the barriers to creating undocumented weapons in your garage,home-based setups will have to advance mightily before your neighbors will all be making AR-15s in their basements.