this post was submitted on 02 Jun 2026
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This first bill allows the state of California to regulate and oversee all 3D prints in the name of public safety.

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[โ€“] Crozekiel@lemmy.zip 1 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Those cheap printers that don't have onboard hardware to do this also generally don't have any networking either. You're lucky if you can get them to connect to a computer with USB - most of the print jobs exclusively get sent via a physical SD card.

The slicer is in a better position to do this draconian business, but they aren't aiming this bill (from what I have found) at slicers at all (probably because they are all open source and, unless the law gets passed world-wide, they would just get forked and hosted by someone else in a place where they are still legal to be "dumb"). They are aiming at hardware. It is effectively a complete ban on cheap 3d printers, and turns the models "legal" to sell to a white-list style of control. The manufacturers that play ball get to continue business in the state, others do not.

All of this to stop a very tiny and difficult avenue for someone to get a gun, when there are much easier and more reliable options available and being used orders of magnitude more often. This has nothing to do with gun control, or guns. This is absolutely a play against 3d printing, at home manufacturing, and right to repair in general. The end goal is DMCA on 3d printing.

[โ€“] semperverus@lemmy.world 1 points 7 minutes ago

To be clear, I am not arguing in favor of what I suggested. I am vehemently against it. But I have worked with the technology enough in a professional setting to know what it is capable of and how it can (and I have) used it. I am afraid of what I am seeing as a possible (probable?) future.