Pennsylvania Firearm Owners Association
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  1. #1
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    Default Smart' pistols headed to US market

    https://techxplore.com/news/2022-01-...t-pistols.html


    "Smart" pistols designed to limit who can shoot them are poised to hit the booming US firearm market this year, taking aim at spiking gun deaths as federal lawmakers remain deadlocked on any new restrictions.

    Questions over reliability and political fights have bedeviled the technology for decades, but backers say it's a chance to prevent children, criminals or people considering self-harm from pulling the trigger.

    Yet whether the deadly weapons will be embraced by buyers, perform as intended in real-life, or deliver on their pledge to increase gun safety are questions that could be years from a definitive answer.

    "I don't have a crystal ball to know whether it's going to be good on balance, bad on balance or ultimately like other smart guns in the past—kind of a dud," said Adam Skaggs, chief counsel and policy director at gun control advocacy group Giffords.

    The system from entrepreneur Tom Holland's company SmartGunz uses RFID chips—similar to the emitters many people use in their car to pay tolls—installed inside rings.

    When shooters grip the gun with the hand wearing the special ring, a safety mechanism unlocks, allowing the gun to fire.

    Holland sees applications in protecting police officers who could have their pistol wrestled away by a suspect; or parents worried their kids could find their firearm.

    "This is only about gun safety," he told AFP. "For those consumers that want a 'safer gun'...they can have access to this if they feel they have the need for lethal protection on their property."

    He expects his pistol, which he said is being tested by some police in the United States, to begin selling to civilians by April or May.

    This undated handout photo courtesy of SmartGunz, LLC, shows company President G. Thomas ("Tom&quot Holland II posing whi
    This undated handout photo courtesy of SmartGunz, LLC, shows company President G. Thomas ("Tom") Holland II posing while he holds his product in Baldwin City, Kansas.
    A gun-owning society

    Any sales would arrive in an unprecedented context in the United States, where some 40 percent of adult Americans live in a gun-owning household, according to the Pew Research Center.

    Firearms sales set a record in 2020, with nearly 23 million sold, according to the Small Arms Analytics & Forecasting consultancy.

    Following racial justice protests and the onset of the the pandemic, the United States saw in 2020 its biggest rise in homicides since national records began in 1960 –- though overall levels of killing remained below the 1990s.

    The recurrent horror of America's mass shootings provoke intense bursts of attention, but over half the roughly 40,000 annual firearms deaths are suicides.

    Ginger Chandler, the co-founder of smart gun maker LodeStar Works, said the user authentication steps are a physical buffer against accidents, suicides and crimes—and a psychological barrier.

    "In times of stress, somebody who is authorized is going to pick up the firearm but they have to do that (extra) step," she said. "Maybe it makes them pause and go 'Hey, do I really want to be doing this right now?'"

    The 9 mm pistol her firm is developing, which it plans to have on the market by 2023, can unlock in three ways: fingerprint sensor, smartphone app or a keypad to enter a code.

    "Smart" pistols, like the one Ken Chandler is test firing in this courtesy image, are designed to restrict who can fi
    "Smart" pistols, like the one Ken Chandler is test firing in this courtesy image, are designed to restrict who can fire them.
    Gun rights lobby

    These new entrants arrive after years of turbulence for "smart" weapons.

    US firearms maker Smith & Wesson agreed with then president Bill Clinton's administration in 2000 to make gun violence-reduction reforms that included developing smart guns, but the deal withered under a backlash from America's powerful gun rights lobby.

    A 2002 New Jersey state law that would have banned pistols without user-authentication technology sparked a furore –- and was recast in 2019 to require state firearms shops to sell smart guns once they become commercially available.

    Then came the case of the smart pistol developed by the German company Armatix—which was derided after a hacker showed in 2017 the safety technology could be defeated with magnets.

    Also, while the smart gun concept has received support from gun control advocates, some experts point out that it's still a deadly weapon.

    "The whole smart gun argument ignores the most common way guns are used to kill in the US—suicide by the person who bought the gun," Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, told AFP in a statement.

    Yet the technology has an appeal especially as political polarization appears to guarantee no new federal restrictions on guns in the near future.

    LodeStar co-founder Gareth Glaser said the company has tried to stay out of the politics of gun rights, and their product seeks to avoid that debate too.

    "It's a workaround," he said. "We would really rather the government stay out of it and allow the consumer to make the choice."

    © 2022 AFP
    "Cives Arma Ferant"

    "I know I'm not James Bond, that's why I don't keep a loaded gun under the pillow, or bang Russian spies on a regular basis." - GunLawyer001

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    I'm flush with dumb guns and I'll keep it that way.
    Gender confusion is a mental illness

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    I'm not flush with them, but agree with Walleye.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    Half of 40,000 gun deaths are 20,000 suicides by gun? A smart gun will know the handler is killing him/her self and refuse to fire. Then the suicidee will have to figure out another way to do it. Perfect!
    There are two kinds of guns. Those I have acquired, and those I hope to.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    I like older guns.
    Small hand made batches of beef jerky...Mountain Meats and More on Face Book

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    I predict that the only market for these will be states that ban the sale of the old ones. New Jersey will try to do that.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    NJ and cali both might have laws already to ban any non-*smart* guns....
    Let's go Brandon!!!

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    Quote Originally Posted by archie19 View Post
    NJ and cali both might have laws already to ban any non-*smart* guns....
    I believe New Jersey passed a law in 2002 requiring all guns to have smart gun technology...another Jersey law that tries to kill logical thinking. The more recent law passed requires all stores to carry one.

  9. #9
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    Quote Originally Posted by archie19 View Post
    NJ and cali both might have laws already to ban any non-*smart* guns....
    When can we ban "non smart people" from voting?
    Small hand made batches of beef jerky...Mountain Meats and More on Face Book

  10. #10
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    Default Re: Smart' pistols headed to US market

    Quote Originally Posted by father-of-five View Post
    I believe New Jersey passed a law in 2002 requiring all guns to have smart gun technology...another Jersey law that tries to kill logical thinking. The more recent law passed requires all stores to carry one.
    I though that NJ, NY Ca and mass would be implementing the change of mags holding more than 1 round would be illegal for sale???
    On the secure guns, They should give a few out in the ghettos in America and see how long it takes to be defeated! ! !

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