Depending on where you live, pointing your browser to Defcad.com yesterday may have shown you something you’d never seen before. It certainly did for me. That’s because I live in one of the two states ...
The group known as DEFCAD have, up until today, been known primarily for their supply of downloadable CAD (read: 3D Printing) templates for firearms. This week they've announced that they're going ...
Defcad makes thousands of downloadable blueprints for 3D-printable guns available online for a $50 yearly subscription fee. One of the company's directors, Cody Wilson, calls the company "Netflix for ...
Mr. Wilson, along with his colleagues in the summer of 2012Defense DistributedWe launched the project named "Weapon Data", created printable weapon data, and opened the file open source. Anyone can ...
Printing guns is poised to go from a hobby to a business. Cody Wilson, a 25-year-old University of Texas law student and founder of Defense Distributed—a nonprofit focused on providing templates for 3 ...
Defense Distributed, the guys working on 3D printed guns and lower receivers for an AR-15, have a storied history with makers, corporations, and our elected representatives. When the news broke they ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More DEFCAD is a website for 3D printing of guns. It’s bathed in controversy, ...
Less than two weeks ago, Texan gunsmith and law student Cody Wilson made headlines (Ars included) when he demonstrated a new 3D-printed lower receiver for an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle that can fire ...
The Texas law student behind a project to build a fully 3-D printed gun has a new venture: a search engine for gun parts and other 3-D printable contraband. In Austin this evening, Cody Wilson of the ...
A group that garnered controversy last year for developing 3D printed gun parts is working on a new project ? what it calls "the world's first unblockable, open search engine for all 3D printable ...
The so-called "Pirate Bay of 3D printing" has shut itself down—for now. DEFCAD, perhaps the best-known site to find the files for 3D-printed gun parts, has complied with an order from a federal judge ...