References
- Type: Video. Title: “Additive in America: Regulating 3D Printing”. Author: “3D Printing Nerd”. Publisher: “YouTube”. Published: 2026-04-07T01:56:42Z. Accessed: 2026-04-13T02:03Z. Location (URI): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86DCeJGNlbY.
So… could I not just disconnect my pc from the internet, or have a desktop or virtual machine without internet access, keep my 3d printer offline, and use a software or 3d modeling software that’s open-source, and profit?
This bill has also just classified my ice tray as a 3D printer, and don’t tell anyone but a trip to my local Home Depot with 10 bucks in my hand could potentially make something more dangerous.
Yup, FreeCAD, Cura slicer, and my printer only hooked up to the outlet.
Theoretically you could also make your own printer from scratch with a few DVD drives and hard drives from a local ewaste facility.
As usual, it’s difficult to discern dumb from malicious, but this is politics, so I assume it’s a bit of both.
Companies lobbying for anti-repair, the need to control the citizens and the means of production, or trying to pander to a particular group (they’re printing knives in school, oh no!)
From the thumbnail: New York, California, … Generic US state?
/s




