DoD Descends On DEFCAD
First time accepted submitter He Who Has No Name writes "While the ATF appears to have no open objection to 3D printed firearms at this time, the Department of Defense apparently does. A short while ago, '#DEFCAD has gone dark at the request of the Department of Defense Trade Controls. Take it up with the Secretary of State' appeared on
the group's site, and download links for files hosted there began to give users popups warning of the DoD takeover."
Well, that didn't take long.
Note: As of this writing, the site is returning an error, rather than the message above, but founder Cody Wilson has posted a similar message to twitter. At least the Commander in Chief is in town to deliver the message personally.
Update: 05/09 21:17 GMT by T : Tweet aside, that should be Department of State, rather than Department of Defense, as many readers have pointed out. (Thanks!)
Glad to see that the first amendment is so inviolable...
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Sex toys manufacturers try to block 3D models of dildos.
These files have been available for a day and have propagated to many other sites. So much for control.
I hope this caused some synapses to fire.
And he was never seen again.
Looks like this whole homemade gun thing is pretty much gone forever, since, as we all know, 3D printing is the only possible way to create a homemade gun.
I think the problem is that he came off as trying to align himself with anarchists and Kim Dotcom, people our corporate overlords don't much appreciate. At least he left Manning and Assange out of it.
Prepare to be fucked by the long dick of the law.
We should control bullets and not guns.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZrFVtmRXrw
The real question is, when did we give the DoD control over domestic actions? The constitution strictly prohibits the military from acting as a policing force on US soil. So, who the hell gave them the right to take down a domestic website?
Streisand Effect!
-- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
A couple of hours ago i downloaded and printed a design from that site. I also proved why this is a gigantic non-issue: getting a good print from a 3d printer is very involved. The machines need a lot of fiddling to get them working right. My magazine, which was supposed to be flat bottomed, had a distinctive curve to it that did not make for a good working part.
Easy Online Role Playing Campaign Management
This is good technology to make guns that can be disguised as something else. Once you have the basic "gun" component you just wrap it in whatever shell you want.
DoD isn't mentioned at all in the article. Its the Department of State that issued the letter.
International Traffic in Arms Regulations (http://pmddtc.state.gov/regulations_laws/itar_official.html)
There's the underlying reason
It's not that the fascist police state the US has become is ever more overtly assertive. The corporatist's political flunkies aren't using an ever-bigger boot on our throats. Our Constitutionally-limited government can't possibly have degenerated into an irredeemably corrupt Orwellian proxy for Wall Street!
Only a tin-foil hatted conspiracy freak or drug-addled anarchist would think that!
Wait...what?
Wasn't there something about due process in some document or other somewhere? Something about a warrant needed before the government can take action?
I can understand taking action as part of the legal process - confiscating evidence as part of filing for criminal charges, for instance. But can the government simply act unilaterally with no oversight? Has it always been this way?
Is it always "government does what it wants with no oversight, and the victim has to get the courts involved?"
Seems like that might be a good change to be included in the next constitution.
Uh, no, it doesn't. The first amendment is the right to free speech. The second amendment is the right to bear arms.
What you are missing here is that these files this guy is sharing are essentially just descriptions of shapes and therefore typically would be considered speech. The files then let you make arms (though really poor quality ones). He is sharing information though, not arms, which is why this has been transmuted from a second amendment issue to a first amendment one.
I'm still wondering though due to that Tao of Math line if I've been expertly trolled or not.
Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
There are plenty of parts of the world where they don't have electricity or indoor plumbing, but you can get a local gunsmith to bang out a good copy of an AK-47 (the skills of these guys w/ simple hand tools amazes me, even if I'm not always thrilled w/ their customers). But design files for a plastic zip gun threaten national security?
...most of congress, along with scotus, suffers from reasonable seizures. It's from the bill of blights, supported by executive disorder.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
DoD Descends On DECAF
Fortunately my congressman is Goodlatte . He'll make sure they leave decaf alone.
You know, Cody the law student should very well have seen this coming. Duh.
I for one am gratified by the efficient workings of our Federal government in representing its citizens' interests. If Mr. Come-and-Take-It wants to pose as such a bad-ass anarchist, and talk shit on YouTube about destabilizing governments and giving everyone a machine gun, then he should get ready to run like a fugitive, and never sleep in the same room twice again. It's treason to plot the violent overthow of your own government.
.... is now free of information on building a gun.
http://www.amazon.com/Homemade-Guns-And-Ammo/dp/158160677X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1368132669
Oh hey
The point isn't that DOD thinks the files are going to disappear, and it doesn't matter anyway since the purpose isn't to "disarm Americans" or "keep the files out of the hands of Americans" or some other utter garbage.
There are treaties and various arms control export restrictions (ITAR) at stake, and US-based corporations or entities cannot provide arms in violation of these constructs. If this sort of thing is on the Pirate Bay or elsewhere, DOD trade control doesn't care.
There is a significant difference between the two. For example, one is involved here and the other is not. The article (and the underlying letter) clearly explain that it is the Department of State that has taken these actions. The summary and headline must be changed.
Is there any actual information that doesn't originate from "DEFCAD" that anyone other than themselves is involved in this? We have the "full text" of a letter and information from DEFCAD. Normally one would expect a copy of the letter that at least looks somewhat official. Though "Glenn E. Smith" is mentioned in a few places as "Chief, Enforcement Divison", "Ms Bridget Van Buren" has nothing but a LinkedIn profile .. anywhere.
Plus there was no reason to "go dark" with the entire site, even if the letter is real, simply remove the "offending" material.
Sounds like a publicity stunt.
Of course there are limits to how far you can push your first-amendment rights; there have to be. See e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution and scroll down to Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes who formulated the clear and present danger test for free speech cases.
How about all those would-be terrorists who can now print their very own pistols that will fail to show up on airport scanners if they (unaccountably) fail to put a big steel x-ray reflector inside the gun? How's that for 'clear and present danger? Feel good about sticking it to 'the man' and spreading 100,000 copies of those gun CAD files, do you? Irresponsible is the least one can say about it.
This is the reason neither Joe Sixpack or 'the man in the street' was put in charge or national security or determining whether this or that speech is protected by the first Amendment or not.
The only real problem is that it's too late now. The horse has already bolted, and every man jack on the planet can shortly print his own plastic gun ... and use that to highjack an airliner or something ... which is what a lot of them seem to want.
Any1 Got the hashes for those files, Free them, I would love it. Both SHA1 and MD5 at least, please!
I absolutely do not think that this will end up being an ITAR restricted item. However, it does seem to provide politicians enough time to cram through some poorly thought out legislation creating an outright ban on them.
For free speech.
...to become a bit more ubiquitous before we start alarming politicians into making it illegal by using it to manufacture weapons?
We don't want 3D printing to become "isn't that how people make plastic guns?" to the lay public. It's too important of a technology, and given how potentially disruptive it is to the business models of a lot of large companies with a shit ton of money, you can bet that people are already talking about how to get rid of it.
So please, if you must design guns for 3D printers, keep the designs private until the public is familiar enough with the technology that they won't buy the alarmist "O NOES, GUNS" excuse that politicians will invariably use to keep people from buying 3D printers.
Its about preventing the next guy from ever appearing out of fear.
Here's the direct download link to all of their published files...
http://defcad.org/stl/zip/DefDist_DEFCAD_MEGA_PACK_v4.2_(Saito).zip
Slashdot Valentines Beta Massacre: iT WORKED! The boycotts killed Beta!!
... Is a go. Seriously, have the folks at the top levels never heard of the Streisand Effect?
!#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
TPTB don't want you to have the power to make and trade designs for new and existing products IN YOUR OWN HOME! So, of course, right off the bat what is being smeared across the media? WTF! PLASTIC GUNS BEING PRINTED! ALARM! Soon the cow bell will ring:
"If you own a 3-d printer, you are a terrorist."
We are headed towards Star Trek's replication technology. Today it's plastic, tomorrow it's food and anything you could imagine, which would have a massive impact all over the world, especially in 3rd world countries.
If ST replication technology came about tomorrow, it would be the same thing, only more sinister, like rumors of dirty people in basements making evil devices beyond mere plastic so we must BAN all of replication technology!
You want to destroy slave factories like Faux-Con and put an end to sweat shops? Usher in the 3-d printers, continue to improve them and release newer, better versions.
You want to feed and clothe the world? Usher in ST replication technology.
The game is controlled, they don't want you to really have freedom, only the illusion of it.
Okay, you may return to your Cable/Satellite/Netflix and other forms of mind control and forget this post.
Compress the file then print it out in easily OCR'able format (QR codes, perhaps), then physically carry it out of the country.
"You can't stop the signal, Mal."
Never heard of plastic bullets have you?
Nobody can effectively stop music piracy, for God's sake, much less anything else. Suppression just pushes this into the hands of the people whose hands you'd rather not have it in. 3D-printed guns, mines, ammo, bombs, not to mention the biological weapon possibilities. They'll all be with us in the next 5 years. You can try and supress it, and if you're stupid, you will. The only effective counter to this is good governance, a fair economy not dominated by the super-wealthy and a reasonable amount of social justice. Sorry that's so unpalatable to you that all you have left is arrest, force and a multitude of drones. I'm sure that will be as effective in the USA as it was in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Metal detectors detect conductive materals. Or you would not be able to find coins (most of which are non ferrous) with them.
It's already on piratebay http://pirateproxy.net/torrent/8449468/Liberator_-_First_3D_Printable_Gun
The magazines demoed on YouTube were "polished" with acetone. Applying Sandstrom 28A, a MIL spec air dry solid film lubricant, should make it more durable than uncoated ABS by providing very low COF (half that of PTFE) and adding some heat resistance. Someone should try this to see how many 38 caliber rounds can be fired before jamming.
United States Department of State
Bureau of Political-Military Affairs
Offense of Defense Trade Controls Compliance
May 08, 2013
In reply letter to DTCC Case: 13-0001444
[Cody Wilson's address redacted]
Dear Mr. Wilson,
The Department of State, Bureau of Political Military Affairs, Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance, Enforcement Division (DTCC/END) is responsible for compliance with and civil enforcement of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2778) (AECA) and the AECA’s implementing regulations, the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (22 C.F.R. Parts 120-130) (ITAR). The AECA and the ITAR impose certain requirements and restrictions on the transfer of, and access to, controlled defense articles and related technical data designated by the United States Munitions List (USML) (22 C.F.R. Part 121).
The DTCC/END is conducting a review of technical data made publicly available by Defense Distributed through its 3D printing website, DEFCAD.org, the majority of which appear to be related to items in Category I of the USML. Defense Distributed may have released ITAR-controlled technical data without the required prior authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), a violation of the ITAR.
Technical data regulated under the ITAR refers to information required for the design, development, production, manufacture, assembly, operation, repair, testing, maintenance or modification of defense articles, including information in the form of blueprints, drawings, photographs, plans, instructions or documentation. For a complete definition of technical data, see 120.10 of the ITAR. Pursuant to 127.1 of the ITAR, it is unlawful to export any defense article or technical data for which a license or written approval is required without first obtaining the required authorization from the DDTC. Please note that disclosing (including oral or visual disclosure) or tranferring technical data to a foreign person, whether in the United States or abroad, is considered an export under 120.17 of the ITAR.
The Department believes Defense Distributed may not have established the proper jurisdiction of the subject technical data. To resolve this matter officially, we request that Defense Distributed submit Commodity Jurisdiction (CJ) determination requests for the following selection of data files available on DEFCAD.org, and any other technical data for which Defense Distributed is unable to determine proper jurisdiction:
1.Defense Distributed Liberator pistol
2..22 electric
3.125mm BK-14M high-explosive anti-tank warhead
4.5.56/.223 muzzle brake
5.Springfield XD-40 tactical slide assembly
6.Sound Moderator – slip on
7.“The Dirty Diane” 1/2-28 to 3/4-16 STP S3600 oil filter silencer adapter
8.12 gauge to .22 CB sub-caliber insert
9.Voltlock electronic black powder system
10.VZ-58 sight
DTCC/END requests that Defense Distributed submits its CJ requests within three weeks of the receipt of this letter and notify this office of the final CJ determinations. All CJ requests must be submitted electronically through an online application using the DS-4076 Commodity Jurisdiction Request Form. The form, guidance for submitting CJ requests, and other relevant information such as a copy of the ITAR can be found on DDTC’s website at http://www.pmddtc.state.gov./
Until the Department provides Defense Distributed with the final CJ determinations, Defense Distributed should treat the above technical data as ITAR-controlled. This means that all such data shoudl be removed form public access immediately. Defense Distributed should also review the remainder of the data made public on its website to determine whether any additional data may be similarly controlled and proceed according to ITAR requirements.
Additionally, DTCC/END requests information about the procedures Defense Distributed follows to d
Simply create a Wikipedia article. And than post the design file in the article.
One would be hard pressed to argue that Wikipedia is NOT a library or similar resource.
How about all those would-be terrorists who can now print their very own pistols that will fail to show up on airport scanners if they (unaccountably) fail to put a big steel x-ray reflector inside the gun?
How's that for 'clear and present danger? Feel good about sticking it to 'the man' and spreading 100,000 copies of those gun CAD files, do you? Irresponsible is the least one can say about it.
Actually printing this gun out is not required. The existence of this printable gun demonstrates that any crude chunk of plastic with what appears to be a trigger and a barrel can potentially fire a bullet and kill.
this is kinda stupid...
so in order for this 3D file to be useful, you need to purchase a 3D printer.. which runs in the area of $8k...
ya ok, from there you can print off a bunch of 1 shot guns.
this isnt going to win any wars, or start any.. hell you would be lucky if you can get away with robbing a liqour store with one of these guns.
it may fire a bullet.. doesnt mean it is accurate... also the range is going to be very limited due to barrel length.. thats also assuming you done lose your hand when you fire it due to everything being plastic.
Thanks for ruining 3D printing technology you fucking gun nut faggot douchebag. Go suck a dick.
Someone needs to FOIA all records of communication between Senator Chuck Schumer's office and the U.S. State Department for the last month. $5 says he requested this.
And if I use my 3D printer to print a 3D printer, will the universe implode?
...just do the same thing we do with cryptographic tools that are considered munitions, which is ensure they aren't exported, and make efforts to provide/limit them to US persons instead of making it freely downloadable for anyone.
The Streisand Effect: By the time you say it, the wait is over.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
... before selling you that book? If not, they should expect a knock on the door, er, a letter in their mailbox soon.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
I know that you're all young whippersnappers who should get off my damn lawn, but does nobody remember the RSA Perl T-Shirts from Joel Furr from back in 1995? Yeah, yeah, most of you weren't out of kindergarten, whatever.
Basically, the shirts had RSA as implemented in 3 lines of unreadable-even-for-perl code, which at the time was illegal to export in machine-readable format (Thanks, ITAR!). I believe there were multiple variations, including barcode versions for extra-crunchy machine-readability and at least one person who attempted to turn himself into a munition by getting it tattooed on. Later on there was a similar movement around DeCSS (not "munitions" related); I still have at least one of the shirts from that.
Seems to me that this is pretty clearly in the same general category.
Oh, and "damn kids"
fencepost
just a little off
http://thepiratebay.sx/search/defcad/0/99/0
That would cut into the revenues of some of the Ruling Party's favorite cronies!
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
What specific law bans the publishing of the instructions to make meth?
Here are some mirrors:
http://www.jraxis.com/tmp/DefDist_DEFCAD_MEGA_PACK_v4.2_(Saito).zip
http://www.eprci.net/DefDist_DEFCAD_MEGA_PACK_v4.2_(Saito).zip
https://www.nhteaparty.org/DefDist_DEFCAD_MEGA_PACK_v4.2_(Saito).zip
http://www.manchfreepress.com/sites/default/files/DefDist_DEFCAD_MEGA_PACK_v4.2_(Saito).zip
"Requests" to remove these files will be heartily laughed at.
Liberty in your lifetime
Isn't this the same thing that happened with PHP? Hosting on a website doesn't violate Itar or something?
i mean, just on the grounds of obscenity "shocking to the conscience"....
Honestly, this is a tricky situation.
The thought of small arms like pistols being printed? It's ok, I guess. It makes me a bit nervous, but it shouldn't be taken away.
Automatic and illegal weapons being printed? Now that scares me. I do not like that at all.
Medical supplies and tools etc. being printed? Awesome! Perfect! Great! Although... it has a potential (slim as though it may be) to put good people out of a job further down the line...
My point: I like the idea of 3D Printing things, it is just my humble opinion that it needs to be regulated.
ITAR also says that exporting blueprints and technical data related to an item requires an export permit in the same way that exporting the item does.
And this puts the ITAR rules in direct conflict with the First Amendment. Guess which wins: The Constitution, or a law?
This government action has just brought the conflict into scope for litigation and created a person with the necessary standing to bring the suit.
He's a law student, too.
(Also a self-proclaimed "anarchist libertarian, which I think is a slap at some of the recent anti-libertarian mouth-foaming among the Lamestream Media).
There are several well-funded (mainly by millions of gunnies' individual contributions) organizations whose charter includes supporting such suits. They've had considerable success lately - such as DC v. Heller (confirming 2nd Amendment protects an individual right) and McDonald v. Chicago ("incorporating" it, i.e. applying it to the states and their subdivisions.)
I think the government just opened themselves up to another 2nd Amendment suit. B-)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
I totally agree with you, but only in theory.
In practice, I have seen the many terror plots that go to court and get convictions are mostly from disaffected lost youth who trash talk, like you said, but the FBI prods them into a plot that they would not have done if left on their own. See FBI manufacturing terrorism
And this is not unique to the USA either. Up here in Canada, there is a case that looks to me as entrapment. The perpetrators would have never took action on their own, had it not been a government informant been egging them on all the time. See Thoughts on the May 2006 terrorism arests in Canada
2bits.com, Inc: Drupal, WordPress, and LAMP performance tuning.
The absolute last thing a federal prosecutor ever wants to see at the other bench is a lawyer from the NRA, the EFF, and the ACLU all sitting next to each other.
And that very well might happen here.
Where is the proof besides this guy's claims?
Started this petition on whitehouse.gov https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/allow-defcad-resume-distributing-their-files/J4TrTQkZ
he has a free speech right to say this to foreigners that trumps ITAR?
I KUT J00 M4NG!!!
Try to make the reader understand what you're writing next time. Thanks a bunch editors, once again...
I believe MIT press was able to print a book of crypto implementations, back when such software was ITAR restricted, so yes: I think he does.
Fuck your reglatory state
Yu also prevent us from keeping/owning/marrying sweet young girls.
You ban everything that is good.
FUCK YOU I HOPE IT IS BRUTALLY OVERTHROWN or crumbles.
Good.
But not enough.
See here: http://www.ballisticproducts.com/Rio-Valu-Hull-12ga-2-3_4-new_primed-blue-10mm-brass-bag_100/productinfo/RIO127010/
And as a later post notes: the small brass cap isn't there to protect the gun from exploding when it's fired. In case you were wondering, I'll tell you what it's for. It's there to ensure reliability of action over a large number of duty cycles. It does that in various ways. The brass cap takes a lot of heat with it if it's ejected directly after the shot (as in a pistol or a rifle). You only need that when you want to be able to sustain a high rate of firing. It also prevents pitting of the barrel, and it ensures low tolerances in the dimension of munitions.
So plastic cartridges are completely feasible for your basic limited-shot hijacker's weapon.
With a little tinkering you can also substitute the percussion cap with something non-metallic too: http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-586081.html
If you go with off-the-shelf materials, the only metallic thingies you'll be left with are the primer and the firing pin.
And I bet you can get rid of those too, e.g. a ceramic firing pin and custom-printed plastic primers.
Because it's undetectible with standard scanners if you leave out the near-pointless metal (fig leaf) pellet.
That does leave the issue of the metal cartridge casing, but I'm sure these loyal patriots are working on that issue as well.
Glad to see obama hates the First Amendment as much as the others.
He runs from a simple question -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3722427&cid=43654735 (since he outright lies on trolling others by ac posts, uses sockpuppets galore to mod himself up + his detractors down, & was caught doing so in the 2nd link below red-handed), & he also claims to have worked at Microsoft (b.s., imo because of what I state next), & yet got completely spanked by "yours truly" on actual computer technical information regarding custom hosts files - very fundamental networking & algorithmically oriented stuff no less, real 'CSC-101 stuff' -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3725365&cid=43659719 (which he can't disprove, but it certainly did prove his ac trollings which he outright lied about & by the 100's that he gave away he was doing here http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3581857&cid=43276741 ).
* Bottom-line: "Ever notice how you come across somebody once in awhile that you shouldn't have f'd with? That's me..." -> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6arlI-z61hU
APK
P.S.=> You fail Jeremiah Cornelius (& you know it - hence your weak replies of the same general nature each time I confront you with this post)... apk
Update: 05/09 21:17 GMT by T : Tweet aside, that should be Department of State, rather than Department of Defense, as many readers have pointed out. (Thanks!)
A Denial of Service attack from the Department of State... Do the DoS-a-DoS (ha ha, ha ha HA!) (With apologies to Busta.)
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
/. bottom of page quote: "Just to have it is enough."
This isn't the first or last time the Federal Government has used international treaties as an end run around constitutional rights. They attempted the same thing with several intellectual property rights treaties. People have to be vigilant or their rights will taken away as we all stand by complaining that we don't like the people that are being targeted and therefore it's okay never realizing that were establishing legal precedent to be used against ourselves.
Why so? Let me explain.
Supposing I were, for the sake of the argument, to agree with your implicit assumption that "the Government" is somehow kept from becoming despotic because lots of people have a handgun at home. I'm definitely not in agreement with you on this assumption, but supposing I were.
Even then the availability of a crummy printable plastic gun won't have any impact on gun availability for law-abiding citizens, who do happen to be in the majority. They can, quite legally, buy all the guns they can stomach from their local arms dealer. Pretty good guns too, by all accounts, and a load of ammunition to go with it.
What would *you* rather have for "self-defence": a standard run-of-the-mill no-frills steel pistol of a reputable make, or some plastic contraption that could blow up in your hand at any shot and which will be accurate enough only for a shootout inside an elevator or an airplane?
The only segment of society that will actually benefit from printable guns is that segment that really wants to have a gun, no matter how crummy and makeshift, that they can get their mitts on without having to register or that will cause any inconvenient questions being asked (like: "Do you have a criminal record?" or "Have you been diagnosed as insane?"). Or the segment that's looking for a gun that won't register on most types of scanner.
I don't think you'd want to aid either segment with obtaining a plastic gun.
And of course no criminal who values his competitive edge will want a plastic pop-gun either. Besides they have their channels already. Part of their job-description as it were.
I therefore conclude that this "we-need-plastic-printable-guns-to keep-the-government-in-check" idea is a big red herring.