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posted by cmn32480 on Friday January 08 2016, @07:13AM   Printer-friendly
from the printster-will-be-the-new-napster dept.

Remember Napster or Grokster? Both services allowed users to share computer files – usually digital music – that infringed the copyrights for those songs.

Now imagine that, instead of music, you could download a physical object. Sounds like something from a sci-fi movie – push a button and there's the item! But that scenario is already becoming a reality. With a 3D printer, someone can download a computer file, called a computer-aided design (CAD) file, that instructs the printer to make a physical, three-dimensional object.

Because CAD files are digital, they can be shared across the internet on file-sharing services, just like movies and music. Just as digital media challenged the copyright system with rampant copyright infringement, the patent system likely will encounter widespread infringement of patented inventions through 3D printing. The problem is, however, that the patent system is even more ill-equipped to deal with this situation than copyright law was, posing a challenge to a key component of our innovation system.

If 3-D printing at home happened fast enough it would cut China off at the knees.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Phoenix666 on Friday January 08 2016, @01:39PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Friday January 08 2016, @01:39PM (#286577) Journal

    That's the case now, but what will it be when you can throw the broken plastic item into a hopper, see it shredded and re-printed as a good-as-new version? What about when you can throw all your cast-off items into that hopper, which will crunch them up, sort them, and return as feedstock for the printer? They have large sorting machines now for various classes of materials, so it's not inconceivable that smaller desktop versions should come about, too.

    That is a much different world than the centralized, 19th-century-based one we're still living in.

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    Washington DC delenda est.
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