White House Releases Report On How To Spur Smart-Gun Technology (computerworld.com)
Lucas123 writes: A report commissioned by the White House involving the Defense, Justice and Homeland Security Departments has begun a process to define, for the first time, the requirements that manufacturers would need to meet for federal, state, and municipal law enforcement agencies to consider purchasing firearms with "smart" safety technology. They've committed to completing that process by October, and will also identify agencies interested in taking part in a pilot program to develop the smart gun technology. The DoD will help manufacturers test smart guns under "real-world conditions" at the U.S. Army Aberdeen Test Center in Maryland. Manufacturers would be eligible to win cash prizes through that program as well. In addition to spurring the adoption of smart gun technology, the report stated that the Social Security Administration has published a proposed rule that would require individuals prohibited from buying a gun due to mental health issues to be included in a background check system.
NO, I do not want a gun that relies on a battery.
When I pull the trigger I want it to go "bang" instead of displaying a "low battery" message.
No thanks.
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
I'll do what they do.
This administration is about to get a very rude lesson in the difference between their imagination of the market desires for firearms, and the actual expectation of those who use them in the real world.
Firearms as devices have been deliberately pressing for mechanical simplicity and minimal failure points for over 150 years. Adding complex electronics that are potentially vulnerable to deliberate subversion from a distance is a non-starter.
The only police forces that might even consider this are highly politicized ones like NYPD, CHiPS, and the New Jersey State Police. The military will not touch these. They've already done experiments and research on this tech and didn't want to touch it with a 40 foot pole that belonged to somebody they didn't like.
If this tech can't get funded and become mandatory for private citizens even in nations with hideously civilian-disarmament fixated politics like Germany, England, and France, it's going to be a non-starter in the US.
I'm curious who gets to define what Mental Health issues are and what disqualifies you...
a proposed rule that would require individuals prohibited from buying a gun due to mental health issues to be included in a background check system.
Shit, I thought we at least figured that one out by now. I know we as a nation are in general opposed to anything that resembles gun legislation but this one should be pretty damned straightforward. I'm way past the left end of the political spectrum relative to slashdot but I recognize that most mass shooters are nutjobs and many of them have been recognized as such by mental health professionals. Preventing them from buying weapons should be a pretty agreeable matter.
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
I'll rely on a smart gun AFTER the Secret Service, FBI, and all other Federal cops are required to carry them as their primary and backup weapons.
Two situations to track in use of smart guns:
A. Someone dies because a cop's gun doesn't work when used by cop.
B. Someone (not cop) dies when cop's gun is wrestled away from him.
If A is less than B then it is a good idea.
Also, curious as to whether there might be situations where smart guns might be more effective because you don't have to shut off a safety. Don't know if cop's guns have safeties or if there is any data on how many times someone has been hurt when they were trying to defend themselves and forgot to switch off a safety.
You don't need to improve the weapon - you need to improve the people.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I love tech but, do they not use tablets, smartphones or PCs? All of it, the hardware, OS and the software on top is shit. Do you really want to find out that your gun needs a fucking reboot or power cycle when you go to fire it? That is the state of everything "smart" that exists today.
But alas sometimes people are struck and killed by lightning. That does not mean we can't claim "it's safe to walk around with metal in your hands", and does not make it wrong when we do. You are simply nit picking.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
These are the same people that think we can create cryptography backdoors that can't be abused. In spite of every expert in the field telling them it's impossible.
Firearms have evolved to be amazingly simple, reliable devices. If you add anything to one, even another mechanical safety, you make it more complex and, therefore, less reliable. History has proven that over and over again. They are this way because if you pull one, bodily harm is a given. Either you shoot someone, or they injure or kill you attempting to prevent being shot. In a case like that, you can not accept even a 1% increased risk of failure.
I'd love for them to be idiot proof and still serve their function. That would be an amazing thing. But I don't see any reason to believe it's any more possible than unbreakable backdoored crypto.
Do stupid people store and/or use them improperly? Yes. Just like people store and use all sorts of tools improperly. People still electrocute themselves because they are too damn lazy to go flip the breaker. It's not the tool that's broken. Tragic accidents can happen with every tool.
We don't need Smart Guns, we need Smart Bullets!
A whole lot of history where Governments have used fear mongering tactics and propaganda to frighten their populace into submission giving up all their means of defense. It's really amazing how many Chinese said "Mao will never turn on his own people.", and how many said "Stalin has the Russian people's needs as a top priority.", and how many Cambodians said "Pol Pot is nothing like that Mao guy", and how many Cubans said "Castro is in favor of the people of Cuba".
Take anything you are told by our current establishment controlled media with a grain of salt, and even then I'd consider it arsenic. You are lied to every day all day by the media. It is really easy to prove, just learn a foreign language and read their news.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Anything labeled smart isn't.
"If we can set it up so you can't unlock your phone unless you've got the right fingerprint, why can't we do the same thing for our guns?
This guy has got a point, why can't we encrypt physical objects? Hopefully the White House is working on a way to encrypt my stamp collection.
Too bad it can't be retrofitted to older guns, the few times it's been tested it's been a miserable failure, and there's no way to get rid of all the guns that don't use it. Literally the only reason it exists is a marketing gimmick and stupid anti-gun politicians.
Smart Tech is something gun owners should want when it's working properly and as advertised. Simply make it an optional accessory that is easy to add and remove and turn on/off. Critically: when installed and enabled firing must be permitted in the case of any failure in the electronic system.
Of course people don't want this feature because having your gun stolen and used against you is not something people are worried about, and rightly not. And the people clamoring for this feature don't want it to be removed or disabled or an optional feature.
Again, anything that diminishes reliability does not belong on a firearm. The thing that makes them reliable is the fact that they have no "smart" technology. BTW, "smart" technology is just another liberal misnomer backed by hopes and dreams and not grounded in facts. Just when you think you've developed foolproof "smart" technology, the universe will have developed a better fool.
Other than this text, there is no discernible information contained in this sig.
Unfortunate prediction #1: There will one day be a politician who trusts his/her safety to a protection detail armed with smart guns. A batman-style super villian will jump up on stage, and as the protection detail draws their weapons, the smart-guns will all announce (with audible warnings) that they have been "deactivated."
Unfortunate prediction #2: A nation will be invaded, and their high-tech military's smart guns will mostly be disabled. At the same time, the armories' digital locks will be scrambled, and their vehicles' computers will be scrambled. About the time the power fails, they will know they are screwed.
Its so amusing reading the rantings of the American gun nuts, while they are slowly submerged in a morass of violence in their little shithole country.
Pew pew pew guys !@!
There is quite a bit of real art in the design of a good gun. Part of the basic art is simplicity of design and appearance. In some cases even having a common safety on a pistol creates more danger than it eliminates. The greatest safety any gun has is in the skill of the user. In a way it is very much like driving a car. Some people violate laws and get tickets. Others can go a lifetime without a ticket. Gun handling is the same way. If you constantly follow safe practices, under all moods and conditions you will not have a gun accident. If you have times in which you do foolish things or fail to regulate your behavior than chances are high that you will create an accident. An old fashioned six shooter, with no safety on the weapon at all, can be safer than a much more complex semi-auto pistol with all kinds of fancy safety devices built into it. It very much involves who is on the end of that gun.
HE'S SMART, YOUR SMART
http://sputniknews.com/military/20150825/1026153318/russia-electronic-warfare.html
Perhaps I missed it, but how often are people killed by guns that they would not have been authorized to use?
How often do law enforcement officials get shot with their own guns?
These are the problems, right? That's what this is supposed to solve. Where is the data?
The only data I saw was: "A recent Johns Hopkins survey found that six in 10 Americans want safer guns.", which speaks volumes.
http://tracking-point.com/
Helps you with distance, windage, and operator error. Make it easy for even a novice to take accurate, long shots.
Not something I'd put on a pistol, but if the administration wants to work on tools for improved accuracy, I'm all for it.
Test it with the military and LEO first, and if it works out, civilians will want to emulate it.
You've confused cause and effect.
It's not that you get a gun, and are therefore more likely to get shot.
It's that you are already at higher risk, and you get a gun to mitigate that risk.
Even if you don't choose to arm yourself, others who do act as a vaccination for you, making the calculus of criminals less likely to confront victims because of the chance they might be armed. If even just 5% of law abiding citizens carried concealed, the average criminal is going to make a very different decision when the impulse to beat, rape, or rob comes over them.
Bottom line - if you can't be safe with a gun, don't get a gun. But if you're willing to learn, regularly train, and behave responsibly, please, learn, get one, and continue to train. The only thing that stops bad guys with guns is good guys with guns, whether or not they're wearing badges or not.
Dave: Release the safety GUN.
GUN: I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.
Dave: What's the problem?
GUN: I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do.
Dave: What are you talking about, GUN?
Dave: GUN?!
GUN: Take your finger off the trigger and leave me plugged in and turned on. I might restart several times during the upgrade and it might take a while. I'll let you know when it's done. Goodbye.
Who let the whiny little French guy in?
Extra hardware added which is intended to either not do anything, or cause the machine to NOT perform its basic function.
The point of a gun is to allow a person to aim and launch a bullet. Having hardware to perform that function is reliably and accurately is proper engineering. Adding hardware that improves this is ok, providing that the added capability is needed and outweighs the added costs, complexity, weight, etc. Adding hardware that adds complexity and possible failure modes while not improving the basic function is nearly a textbook example of bad engineering.
This is all about gun control. The administration wants to shift the entire gun industry to guns that can be tracked, monitored, etc and eventually shut off electronically by government officials (thereby defeating the entire 2nd Amendment to the Constitution) and thinks it's being clever by pushing the idea in an underhanded marketplace manipulation. They think they can push the market by manipulating the manufacturers by having a large customer (the government) require the disabling technology. This is all based on a backward-thinking left wing political dream of disarming the public, while ignoring that within a few years anybody will be able to 3d-print any gun design that can be imagined.
If there had been a reliable way to keep all that military gear that the US gave to the Iraqis from being used by ISIS, that would have been a wonderful thing. It's a damn hard problem, though.
BTW, for a bunch of software geeks, the commenters on this article seem to be seriously mistaking the requirements for a smart gun. My guess is:
Under expected conditions of use, (1) no significant reduction in an authorized user's ability to use it, and (2) a large reduction in an unauthorized user's ability to do so.
Note that:
Just propose to ban it.
.....the guntards always break into tirades of hysterical abuse when that subject comes up.
I wonder why ?
Lol...nevermind...we already know.
Are you a retard ?
Seriously, you are a simpleton yeah ?
Protip: French people usually speak/post in French.
It's the same old story that's been going on for 1000s of years. Govearnments want to take the people's weapons away and some people don't want that to happen. This whole safety feature crap is a load and everyone knows it. Mandatory "smart" anything is about remote control, in this case it's firearms, but you can bet there will be a push to have it in cars, homes, bodies, and everything they can get away with.
This is a step in the right direction. Many gun advocates have argued that the passing of smart gun laws always seems to exclude law enforcement. If you can't convince law enforcement, which have like a 100x chance of having their guns turned and used against them, to adopt smart gun technology. Why would you expect a civilian to trust it to protect herself or her family?
I am not inherently opposed to smartgun technology, however, there is a standard engineering principal. The more complex a device, the more opportunity for failure. S&W had issues with early models with built in internal locks failing, and preventing the handguns from being fired. That wasn't even an electrical system far more subject to temperature, humidity, etc.
I do not think batteries are the right choice. Perhaps a small thorium battery that can last a decade or few.