Home-Made Browning: 3D printers stoke fears of backyard technology

maximus

///Member
Home-Made Browning: 3D printers stoke fears of backyard technology

Experts now say that anyone who has a couple of thousand dollars for a 3D printer and an internet connection can make a 3D gun, which will be invisible to X-ray machines and metal detectors. In the U.S., critics of the technology are warning it has reached a dangerous point, with federal law banning undetectable firearms set to expire in less than two weeks. RT's Marina Portnaya found out what it takes to print a gun.

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kabal

Active member
what a bull intro to the video.

they talk about undetectable to xray guns, and then they show metal guns, which are obviously detectable.
 
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