Government can control the manufacturers to limit functions.
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Replying to @BaconMore1 @ScottAdamsSays
If you eliminate the function to 3D print a gun, you eliminate the function to print anything. 3D printing a gun isn't functionally any different than 3D printing a Pokemon character.
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Replying to @BaconMore1 @ScottAdamsSays
Try copying a $20 bill on a color copier and see what happens.
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Replying to @NopeNotByMe @ScottAdamsSays
I didn't try it, but from an article I read, something in the money itself prevents you from copying it. That is a completely different scenario than 3D printing a gun. You are the one creating the gun. You're not copying anything.
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Replying to @BaconMore1 @ScottAdamsSays
The money contains a pattern called the Eurion Constellation. Copiers recognize the patter and reject it. http://people.duke.edu/~ng46/collections/steg-eurion-constellation.htm …
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Yes, people will always find ways to kill one another. It’s a question of how difficult do we want to make 3D printing a gun to be. Easy enough that any 9 year old can do it, or difficult enough that it takes an advanced hacker?
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For now. Just wait until the government makes every 3D printer check in via Internet before printing.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @FuggGunControl and
Just recently I wanted to photoshop a $100 bill for fun and I realized that if you take an image of a new $100 bill & try to open it up in Photoshop will not open up the file. I can see 3D printing software doing a similar thing.
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