This is a great article. Smart guns and non-lethal weapons are the future.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/09/opinion/shane-smarter-guns/index.html
Make guns smartBy Jeremy Shane , Special to CNN
updated 10:36 AM EST, Wed January 9, 2013
Editor's note: Jeremy
Shane, who served in the Justice Department during the George H.W. Bush
administration, has led ventures in online media, energy and education.
(CNN) -- Voices across the political spectrum are
debating how to prevent mass shootings such as the one in Newtown,
Connecticut. Familiar ideological lines are being redrawn. Some want to
renew the ban on assault weapons and expand waiting periods to buy a
gun. Others want to place armed guards in schools. And then there is the
challenge of preventing guns from falling into the hands of the
mentally ill.
While the debate rages
on, it's worth thinking out of the box for a moment. What if we could
design guns to be smarter and safer -- with hardware and software? The
right technology could neutralize the killing capability of an assault
weapon, even in a madman's hands.
The root of the problem
is that guns are "dumb." Pull the trigger and they discharge bullets
mindlessly, regardless of who is doing the aiming or where they are
aimed. Guns should "know" not to fire in schools, churches, hospitals or
malls. They should sense when they are being aimed at a child, or at a
person when no other guns are nearby.
Hardware fixes alone -- such as a ban on extended clips -- may mitigate
carnage in an assault, but they will not change the risk that an event
happens at all if the person holding the gun wants to harm others.
Addressing that challenge with reliable precision requires a hardware
and software solution.
Many complex products
have been transformed by safety-enhancing technology. Look at airplanes,
which have layers of computer-controlled safety features to temper
pilot error. Cars, increasingly, have sophisticated controls to override
drivers and avoid collisions. Guns, too, can benefit from technological
advances.
After the Newtown
shooting, a number of Silicon Valley leaders signed the "Demand a Plan"
petition for new gun laws. It is good to know how strongly they feel
about tougher regulation. It would be even better if they would invest
their know-how and wealth to create a new kind of gun control -- the
software kind.
How might this work?
Start with locational "self-awareness." Guns should know where they are
and if another gun is nearby. Global positioning systems can meet most
of the need, refining a gun's location to the building level, even
within buildings. Control of the gun would remain in the hand of the
person carrying it, but the ability to fire multiple shots in crowded
areas or when no other guns are present would be limited by software
that understands where the gun is being used.
Guns should also be
designed to sense where they are being aimed. Artificial vision and
optical sensing technology can be adapted from military and medical
communities. Sensory data can be used by built-in software to disable
firing if the gun is pointed at a child or someone holding a child.
Building software into
guns need not affect gun owners' desire to protect their homes. Trigger
control software could be relaxed when the gun is at home or in a car,
while other safety features stay on to prevent accidental discharges.
Guns used by the police would be exempt from such controls.
Finally, guns should be
designed to broadcast their location when they are loaded. Police could
see if high-powered assault weapons are entering or getting close to a
public place. Gun owners, too, could choose to broadcast their guns'
locations publicly to increase deterrent effect.
Couldn't gun software be
hacked? Perhaps, but the risk can be reduced by open-sourcing code,
requiring software patch downloads, and notifying gun makers or law
enforcement if software is disabled. Open-sourcing code is not
foolproof, but it will build a community of lawful gun owners and code
writers who value safety and Second Amendment rights. Enabling two-way
communication between guns and their original makers will help guns to
be tracked beyond the initial sale, putting greater long-term
responsibility on gun makers.
Developing gun software
and hardware adaptations could be hastened through a Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency-style program. This Defense Department agency
tries to solve difficult warfare challenges with cutting-edge ideas. It
gave us GPS, among other things. In the private sector, rewards can be
offered for specific technological achievements, such as what the
X Prize Foundation has been doing. Gun makers, gun retailers, even the National Rifle Association could underwrite a similar prize.
Gun software could be
phased in, starting with the most lethal assault rifles. Today's guns
are componentized, creating possibilities for a vibrant aftermarket,
with add-ons tested and certified by a consortium of gun makers or
responsible gun owners.
Technology cannot end
depravity or violence, but it can limit the evil a person can inflict on
others. After this latest heart-wrenching massacre, enacting new laws
may help us feel like we have done something. But smarter technology may
actually do a lot more
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