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3D Printers Have 'Fingerprints', a Discovery That Could Help Trace 3D-Printed Guns: Study (sciencedaily.com) 139

Like fingerprints, no 3D printer is exactly the same. That's the takeaway from a new University at Buffalo-led study that describes what's believed to be the first accurate method for tracing a 3D-printed object to the machine it came from. From the study: The advancement, which the research team calls "PrinTracker," could ultimately help law enforcement and intelligence agencies track the origin of 3D-printed guns, counterfeit products and other goods. "3D printing has many wonderful uses, but it's also a counterfeiter's dream. Even more concerning, it has the potential to make firearms more readily available to people who are not allowed to possess them," says the study's lead author Wenyao Xu, PhD, associate professor of computer science and engineering in UB's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

[...] To understand the method, it's helpful to know how 3D printers work. Like a common inkjet printer, 3D printers move back-and-forth while "printing" an object. Instead of ink, a nozzle discharges a filament, such as plastic, in layers until a three-dimensional object forms. Each layer of a 3D-printed object contains tiny wrinkles -- usually measured in submillimeters -- called in-fill patterns. These patterns are supposed to be uniform. However, the printer's model type, filament, nozzle size and other factors cause slight imperfections in the patterns. The result is an object that does not match its design plan.

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3D Printers Have 'Fingerprints', a Discovery That Could Help Trace 3D-Printed Guns: Study

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  • Easy work-around (Score:5, Informative)

    by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @04:54PM (#57506258) Journal
    Clean the inside of the nozzle with a metal brush after each print. The micro-scratches it creates should throw it off enough that you can't ID it.
    • by oic0 ( 1864384 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @04:57PM (#57506272)
      Or throw the nozzle away after each one, they're dirt cheap. While youre at it, adjust the acceleration settings to make sure they dont try to trace you from the wobble.... Not that it matters. The things are terrible guns lol. A mini crossbow from amazon is probably better.
      • you can buy a serviceable gun for less than $150 in USA. or used less than $50. why anyone would bother with 3D printed flimsy crap is beyond me.

        yes there are 3D "printing" systems that can make a substantial gun, you'll pay more than a few houses in price for 'em.... they're 3D printing turbines and stuff with those but that's not hobbyist territory

        • Re:Easy work-around (Score:5, Interesting)

          by DaHat ( 247651 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @05:24PM (#57506436)

          Because you don't understand the underlying issue at hand.

          This is the best write-up I've seen as to the reasoning: https://www.wired.com/story/de... [wired.com]

          • by zlives ( 2009072 )

            you still can't sue a gun "manufacturer"/printer though... so who cares if it is a known brand...

            • You can sue any gun manufacturer that produces faulty guns. A gun that actually hits the target it is pointed at is not faulty; that is the definition of functioning properly.

          • Because you don't understand the underlying issue at hand.

            This is the best write-up I've seen as to the reasoning: https://www.wired.com/story/de... [wired.com]

            And now you understand even less.

            Anyone can build their own unregistered fire arm right now. They don't even have to put a serial number on it, if they have no intention of selling it.

            As to building a lowcost cheap gun, anyone who has a pair of hands and some basic plumbing equipment can do it any time they like.

            Are you going to require a license to have a pipe wrench, to buy a length of pipe, a nail ?

            • even funnier that article talking about "guns into code".... a drawing of gun plans does that too.

              • Yep, gun grabbers in general think they are clever for coming up with the idea "we wouldn't have gun crime if there were no guns"

                Once they get that i'm special feeling, there's no pointing out to them we would have to repeal most of civilization to make that happen

          • Good article, thanks. I've added it to my list of reference articles so that I hopefully remember to refer people to it who think that the "3D printed gun" debate has anything to do with 3D printing.

          • Except anyone with a couple hundred bucks and a few months to learn can currently buy the tools to make a halfway decent gun from a block of metal.

          • nothing enlightening there, people could make guns before, they can still make guns. They can chose to sell or use them illegally. people can make shitty guns with 3D printing, or nice ones that cost less money without 3D printing. for added fun they can sound suppress those guns, legally (pay the tax stamp) or illegally (don't pay and/or sell the thing illegally).

            no new issues in play.

            • by DaHat ( 247651 )

              Also to you.. thank you for confirming you didn't read or understand the article.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          This is a wholly artificial panic. Tells you some people have something rather bad to hide and hence they are hyping this.

    • I still fail to see why anyone would want a 3D printed barrel (unless it came out of one of those machines the aerospace company uses that made strong metal parts)

      rifling a barrel isn't hard, you can buy the broach or button online legally. just like you can make a gun legally in these United States.

      A 3D printed receiver I could see being useful...

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by HornWumpus ( 783565 )

        Because it makes the gun grabbers have kittens, making them look even stupider.

        • by N_Piper ( 940061 )
          I don't know, you look pretty dumb to me, parading around with your milled aluminum AR-15 lower receiver and bump stock shouting "FREEDOM!" while defense contractors fill contracts for equipment worth billions per piece.
          The entire f-ing point of the well organised militia bit was to keep the public in line with the military, in some meaningful way, to prevent a takeover.
          I hate to be the bearer of bad news but the ship sailed A LO~ONG time ago on that one, I mean, unless you can 3D print up some tank busti
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 )

        The 'threat' of printed guns is being trotted out entirely for political purposes. It's not a real, credible threat or risk to anyone.

        Basically the gun-control folks are trying to come up with a new bogeyman to further their agenda.

        OR its a ploy by the big machining lobby to eventually ban personal ownership of CNC machines to further solidify their market position.

        See; first they trump up the possibility of every tom, dick and harry (who are most likely white supremacists living in an anti-government comp

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The 'threat' of printed guns is being trotted out entirely for political purposes. It's not a real, credible threat or risk to anyone.

          Not yet. But the printers keep getting better and cheaper, and you have to assume that we are headed towards something like a Star Trek replicator where it just makes arbitrary stuff for you.

          Same thing happened with 2D printers. Once colour printing became affordable there was a possibility of printing things like money. Photoshop has code that detects money and stops you editing/printing it, for example. Laser printers put hidden yellow dots on the page so it can be traced.

          I'm not saying those are good thi

      • Rifling a barrel is hard, if you're a terrorist and you care more about covering the money trail than surviving the attack.

        Milling is fairly easy, and yet the machines are big, make a lot of noise, and can be difficult to purchase in person using cash without looking suspicious.

        Also, what makes you think they even care if it is rifled?

        Buying stuff online creates a paper trail; that's fine for people who are just interested in their Freeze Peach, but it is a bigger issue for terrorists.

        Too many assumptions c

        • Given that the "successful" terrorists are sponsored by some government or another, exactly how does the civilian market for weapons actually affect their ability to obtain weapons?

          • "broad unsupported claim" followed by "whudabut."

            You don't even seem to understand the concept that places exist, on planet earth, and that the places are not all in the same place. So a government having weapons, does not automatically teleport those weapons under the beds of their foreign agents, to use untraced. Instead they have to transport them around, without knowing if they've been tracked or not. So even hostile governments don't normally do it that way. Instead they send money, which is used to at

        • Re:Easy work-around (Score:4, Informative)

          by harrkev ( 623093 ) <kevin.harrelson@ ... om minus painter> on Friday October 19, 2018 @06:15PM (#57506684) Homepage

          You have obviously never been to a gun show. With a pocket full of cash, you can easily get everything that isn't a legal gun without any paperwork at all. Uppers, lower parts kits, sights, furniture, etc. is all easily available.

          • You wouldn't know if I had been to a gun show or not from what I said, you're just spewing.

            Facts don't change depending one your policy opinions.

            The whudubut you point at doesn't even have the implications you think it does. For one thing, what if most gun shows are monitored by the government and foreigners who attend are likely under surveillance? It isn't hard to imagine reasonably possible circumstances that would mitigate the threat you identified, but not the one under discussion here. But regardless,

            • by harrkev ( 623093 )

              For one thing, what if most gun shows are monitored by the government and foreigners who attend are likely under surveillance?

              Yeah, "what if." What if a meteorite hit you on the head and kills you? Life is too short to be worried about "what if."

              Park several blocks away and walk there. On the way back, take public transportation to a random mall. Go into the bathroom and change clothes. If you are that paranoid, there are things that you can do.

              Also, how is the government supposed to know that you are

        • Milling is fairly easy,

          True.

          and yet the machines are big,

          A quick look online tells me a mill capable of producing firearm parts would weigh about 150 pounds, and not be much bigger than a common kitchen stove, dishwasher, or perhaps refrigerator. Even if I'm off a bit on the size and weight there's plenty of very capable mills small and light enough that someone with a pickup truck and 3 or 4 guys can move with little difficulty.

          make a lot of noise,

          Not really. I've seen them in operation and they don't make much more noise than other typical household appliances. Cheap dishw

      • >A 3D printed receiver I could see being useful...

        Exactly. And that's the point. A fully 3D printed gun is just a media novelty to get people talking.

        The key however, is that the lower receiver, just a frame that holds together some of the key bits that do the actual work, and gets a serial number, is the *only* piece of a modern, modular gun, that is legally considered a gun. Everything else can be bought at any physical or online store with no more regulation than for cabinet hinges.

        3D print the low

    • Clean the inside of the nozzle with a metal brush after each print. The micro-scratches it creates should throw it off enough that you can't ID it.

      The filament is getting melted as it passes through the nozzle. Liquid is being deposited, ideally at just the right temperature to fuse with the surrounding material yet also to solidify quickly. But alignment of one layer to the next and the precise fusion with the lower materials (according to TFS) are still traceable from printer to printer. However, those details are easily altered. They are the combination of the printer's physical characteristics, and the setup used. They will differ for different ty

    • Clean the inside of the nozzle with a metal brush after each print. The micro-scratches it creates should throw it off enough that you can't ID it.

      OK, now what about the scratches and differences on the gear that shoves the filament into the nozzle? Also, if you're scratching it up enough to change the imprint, you're going through a lot of nozzles! You could also just change nozzles more often.

      It might not help as much as you think, because this is a "fingerprint" in the sense that anything else that is 1-in-10 is a "fingerprint." As in, nothing at all like the uniqueness of an actual fingerprint! Or for example, most ink printers print a difficult-t

    • That's assuming 3D printers don't have an equivalent of the machine identification code [wikipedia.org] that laser and inkjet printers have. [eff.org]
    • It doesn't matter anyway; it is not illegal to make your own firearm [atf.gov] in the first place. Who cares if they can ID where it comes from, it's not a crime to make a firearm for personal use.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Close but not the nozzle. All 3d printers have some tolerance they are built in kod with, so its this small but of variation in the mechanical system that introduces some minute degree of wobble layed down plastic. I can see how given enough analysis you may see a trend in prints from a single printer but heres the catch: adjusting the printer will change future prints and prevent identifying the prints.

    • Why bother? They would need to know it was you who did it, in order to seize your printer.
  • Oh noes (Score:4, Insightful)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @05:00PM (#57506296)

    Even more concerning, it has the potential to make firearms more readily available to people who are not allowed to possess them

    So does the plumbing section at Home Depot. Faster and cheaper than 3D printing as well. 3D printed guns are really only proof of concept to demonstrate how stupid gun control laws are. Anyone actually needing one can make a zip gun that has an order of magnitude lower probability of blowing up from a scrap pile.

    • Try to concealed carry it though.
      • Re:Oh noes (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @05:14PM (#57506396)

        Try to concealed carry it though.

        No 3D plastic printed gun that won't blow up in your face is smaller or more suitable to CC than is a brick. Because ... plastic. Hardware store parts include things like ... actual metal. A reliable, lethal one can be home-brewed and still remain much smaller and easier to conceal. Or, the criminally minded person who clearly doesn't mind breaking laws anyway could just you know, buy a gun. Legally or otherwise, as both are readily available to criminals who are willing to lie or otherwise do illegal things.

        • by dknj ( 441802 )

          The only thing you missed is that plastic is not detected by metal detectors and some x-ray machines.

          Likewise a tiny zipgun could make it past a security checkpoint just the same, but plastic lowers your detection threshold.

        • You can buy every component of a highly modular AR-15 except for the "central frame" with no regulation - they are not legally considered guns. All you need to 3D print that frame, the lower receiver, and you can have any weapon the AR-15 is designed to become, without breaking any laws, or creating any paper trail. Or you could just buy yourself an 80% complete kit and finish it yourself, it's still not legally considered a gun.

          https://www.wired.com/story/de... [wired.com]

          • Yes, it IS legally considered a gun, but you're prevented from transferring it to anyone else. You can only have it for your own use. In some places, if you're going to take if off of your own property, you'd need to serialize it (silly, but there it is). Some places may also bar you from possessing it if it has a lightweight barrel, or too many of the wrong features (because features are scary). If you want to sell it, you have to go through the federal paperwork of becoming a manufacturer - and that's a b
      • Looks easier than a revolver

        https://www.thefirearmblog.com... [thefirearmblog.com]

      • This would be incredibly easy [wikihow.com] to carry concealed, since it's not much bigger than a person's hand in the first place.
    • by Zorro ( 15797 )

      Two pieces of pipe and a nail and you can create a shotgun that can cut anyone in half.

      Cost $10. Time to construct an hour or so.

      • Two pieces of pipe and a nail and you can create a shotgun that can cut anyone in half.

        Or blow a hole through "bullet proof" glass.

        Most windows at banks and drug stores will be rated to hold up to handguns and small rifles. A 12 gauge slug carries a lot of energy in a small enough area to punch a hole in such glass. There's enough YouTube videos on this to prove it to yourself. Depending on the armored car or such they might be rated to take a .50 BMG and therefore shrug off a shot from a 12 gauge.

  • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @05:08PM (#57506346)

    It should be easy to identify the blood on what's left of the gun after being shot.

  • set up your speakers

    next to your 3D printer

    and

    play a different song

    for every print you make.

    I read somewhere

    that the best 3D printed GUNS

    where printed while playing

    Chopin - Piano Sonata No. 3

    Volume needs to be loud enough

    to cause tiny ripples on a glass of water

    also,

    yes you need a glass of water

    to verify the presence of ripples on the water surface.

  • Someone who claims that a 3D printer "footprint" is conclusive evidence linking anything to anyone, has no concept of modern manufacturing, utilizing CNC machines.

    Aside from that, unlike a test-firing of a metal firearm, a 3D printer can be adjusted by law enforcement to print in a particular fashion.
  • Reality Winter was convicted [wbur.org] because the classified documents that she printed out and gave to a reporter had microdots that identified the office printer at the NSA.
  • And this method becomes irrelevant.... The smoothing will wipe away the majority of the traces being used and slightly re-size the object.
  • Seriously. Type writers use to be able to be traced. I am sure the material that is used in the 3d printers is also fingerprints. Including other distinctions. Again, why does this surprise anyone.
    • Yes, they could, because the various typebars wore in unique, distinctive ways, such as having one character offset in a particular direction or another key not printing completely. Of course, this could be defeated if you had access to several machines of the same model plus some small tools so that you could move various typebars around among the machines so that none of them matched the sample. Much more practical, of course, was either selling the machine, smashing it or dumping it someplace where it'
  • They described a lot of different aspect that give a particular 3D printer some sort of unique fingerprint.. so what's to stop someone from doing the deed, then discarding one of the parts and replacing it, like I dunno.. the nozzel?

    This research into method to identify the source printer of a particular 3D printed object seems pretty unintelligent. Did they even consider how easy it would be to mess with your device to make it's 'fingerprint' change?

    I'd go as far to say, as a 3D printer gets used, it's si

  • A solution looking for a problem. How many people have been shot with a printed gun?
  • and I’m willing to bet they used proprietary software that managed the infill for them, this is something aftermarket slicers allow you to change, not just the amount but even the type.

    Even if you use proprietary that doesn't allow you to alter the infill, all you need to do to mess with their results is to rotate the object a small amount, it will alter how the infill pattern is laid down. If each file has a 1degree rotation the software would likely be unable to identify what printer did what bec
  • 3D printed guns are much like the ever feared, at least in Kommiefornia, .50 cal sniper rifle. Both have not been used in crimes yet get inordinate amounts of press.
    • Please don't say Kommiefornia. You sound like my Dad. But you are right: The .50 Cal ban was just boogeyman worry.

  • Build your sten at home with regular tools since it will be more reliable and won't have a fingerprint either.
  • Been in the copier/printer/fax/computer business almost 40 years. Printers print a row of light yellow dots, even on b&w copies along the edges to ID each print. It's not as bad with "fake" stuff these days because most printers have tech to know if it is a "non copy" document. Unless you copy them over 150% or less than 74% of the original size, they come out blank or black, or just won't copy at all.
  • What is all this uproar over 3D printed plastic toys. A 3D printed plastic gun is a complete and total joke, they last for what, 3 or 4 shots, then it breaks. Plus, 3D printers are expensive.

    On the other hand, I can can go to Home Depot, and for a few hundred dollars, I can buy all the tools and material I need to build a REAL usable gun, that lasts more that 3-4 shots, and actually has some accuracy. Literally all you need is a cheap drill press, drill bits, files, some steel, piece of pipe, springs, p
    • Look up Creality Ender 3 PRO. Those can be had for $200 these days, and can print all the parts for the "toy" gun. It's not so much that they are ready for prime time, its the fact that a printer of the same capability would have run you $25,000 just ten years ago.

      The metal printers and reinforced plastic capable printers, that can actually print all the "real" gun parts, yes including the tungsten rails and rifled barrels, run about $100,000-$200,000 today. So we are talking about $300,000 (one of ea
  • could ultimately help law enforcement and intelligence agencies track the origin of ... counterfeit products and other goods

    Where can I get one of these (presumably) affordable 3D printers capable of printing high-enough quality to be able to pass any attempt at counterfeiting as an original product!??!

    • could ultimately help law enforcement and intelligence agencies track the origin of ... counterfeit products and other goods

      Where can I get one of these (presumably) affordable 3D printers capable of printing high-enough quality to be able to pass any attempt at counterfeiting as an original product!??!

      Counterfeit Etsy products of course.

  • There will end up being some inane law that requires the printers to make an identifying mark inside the material. Something that you can't get at. That will be the standard commercial fair. Then your enthusiast will simply print new parts for his printer and jail brake the software that causes this and neatly go around it.

    Same deal if they mandate some sort of microtag to be laced into the filament. People will just simply make their own.

    I don't think our gov't overlords get it yet....they are abo

  • ... in the Rosenberg case?

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