I’m not the person you replied to, but it’s an okay comparison. It’s not perfect - 3D printers are way less dangerous than cars - but it conveys the same point.
Like cars and unlike guns, 3D printers are tools. The federal government prevents a convicted felon from owning a gun, but not from driving; generally speaking, states only prohibit this if you were convicted of reckless driving or some other vehicle related offense.
Also, once I have a license I can walk into any car dealer and drive out with a car a couple hours later. This law has an up-to-15 day turn around for the background check and no means of attesting that you are licensed and permitted to purchase a 3D printer without waiting. That’s gonna be a pain for everyone who’s interested in a 3D printer. If my car is taken out of service and I need it to get to work, I can buy another. I don’t have to wait 15 days. If my business involves 3D printing and one of my printers breaks down and needs replaced, having to wait an extra 15 days for a replacement is ridiculous.
If the law said “Felons who were convicted of crimes involving 3D printers may not purchase or own a 3D printer” then that would be more appropriate and closer to how cars are handled.
IMO a more apt comparison would be to other consumer grade tools, like drills, circular saws, etc… Just because I can theoretically make something dangerous with such a tool doesn’t mean the tool needs to be restricted.
Afaik NY doesn’t prohibit felons from buying an “80 percent” Glock frame, a Glock slide, and a Dremel, nor does it prevent them from buying a CNC that can mill a full metal gun. (NJ prohibits the first of those (for everyone) and it’s illegal there to construct a gun at home if you aren’t legally permitted to own one, but that’s harder to enforce.) Either of those legal purchase sets enable you to create a gun at home that’s a much more effective firearm than can be 3D printed. Prohibiting them from buying a 3D printer (when technically even an Ender 3 can print a “gun”) is just silly.
Some stats: in the USA, there were:
- 1.2 guns per capita in 2017.
- 333 million residents in 2022
- estimating 400 million guns in 2022
- 20k deaths by gun violence in 2022 (and slightly more deaths by suicide involving a gun)
- 422k or so 3d printers in the US (according to this site in 2020); this number is probably triple or more now, though
- 0 people killed with guns verified to have been created by 3d printers ever in the US (I found one unverified account)
- 264 million registered vehicles in 2015
- 35,485 deaths due to motor vehicle collisions in 2015
this works out to:
- 1 homicide per 20k guns in 2022
- 2.7 deaths per 20k cars in 2015
- 0 deaths per 20k 3D printers in every year
FireTower@lemmy.world 1 year ago
If that one unverified one is the one I’m thinking out of Rhode Island from Jan 2020 that was a polymer 80 not a 3D printed gun.
hedgehog@ttrpg.network 1 year ago
Sure was, and that’s what I thought as well.
FireTower@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I looked into it a while ago one news site had pictures he’d posted on FB with it in the background if I remember correctly.