Looks even more draconian than the New York law. For example, it seems to mandate proprietary, locked down slicers from the printer manufacturer.<p>--<p>For integrated preprint software [slicer] design, guidance for how vendors shall demonstrate that printers will accept print jobs exclusively through authorized and validated software systems and will not accept print jobs from unauthorized software pathways, including attempts by users seeking to evade a detection algorithm.
At some point between this, age verification for the OS, and everything else, it starts to seem like a coordinated attack on computing.
The Take Action link only took 30 seconds: <a href="https://www.eff.org/3DPrintCA" rel="nofollow">https://www.eff.org/3DPrintCA</a><p>(did choose to edit the letter but otherwise really, it autofills and takes no time)
Imagine if you couldn't buy a lathe unless it refused to make a baseball bat (which could be used for hitting people).<p>Or if you couldn't buy scissors (because they could cut brake lines).<p>Or if you couldn't buy a car (because it could be used to run someone over).<p>And if all of those checked with the government before functioning.<p>It's almost like maybe instead you should just ban the undesirable end action, enforce that law, and create societal conditions that don't nudge or force people into doing undesirable things.
guess what, the state of california on the printer bed, depicted in the article, looks close to the profile of an AR15 pistol grip.<p>im looking forward to the idea that the outline of Ca. may trigger false positives
I had the same hunch when I saw it, which is either pure genius on the part of the author/publisher or pure lol meme magic.
Better yet, design and popularize an AR grip that <i>is</i> the state of California
Hope sanity prevails and printers stay free, don't give Europe ideas.
If some people want to make their own gun, then some people will also make their own 3D printer.<p>This joke of a law isn't going to stop any 3D printed handguns from getting made, it will only add one more relatively easy step.<p>Then what, ban stepper motors?
> Then what, ban stepper motors?<p>Don't give them ideas.<p>But seriously, given that the 3D printer movement started out with people building their own printers from scratch and there continues to be a healthy open-source hardware ecosystem within the community, I can't see this stopping anyone.<p>Unless you also make it illegal for 3D printers to print 3D printer parts...
As a non american it always seems like California is the most retarded state. Is there some kind lead contamination in the ground water? Of course, we have to deal with the EU, so I'm not throwing stones... just pondering.