Copy Protecting Objects?

By on February 1st, 2011 in Ideas

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A piece by i.Materialise got us thinking about object copy protection. In their post, Joris Peels tells the tale of how a Thingiverse user posted a set of game pieces suitable for printing. The catch was that these pieces were, for all intents, a replacement set for the popular Settlers of Catan board game! It’s one thing to post generic items like coin holders or doorstops, but we’re venturing into unknown territory when clearly copyrighted objects such as these are replicated. 
 
This is a very difficult challenge, because there’s no clear way to enforce copy protection of objects. You can’t put a security dongle on objects, and watermarks are easily ignored – or even erased. No effective permission system exists within 3D file formats, other than protecting the files themselves. Even when items are printed, their structure can be accurately captured using 3D scanners. 
 
Other digital media have undergone the same challenge. The music and film industries still seek adequate solutions, but the trend seems to be to avoid copy protection mechanisms entirely and depend on pricing that people are willing to pay. Maybe the same solution will evolve in the 3D world. 
 
We think we’re going to struggle with this question increasingly in the future. With luck, no one will come forward claiming rights for doorstops.
 
What ideas do readers suggest for protecting objects?
 

By Kerry Stevenson

Kerry Stevenson, aka "General Fabb" has written over 8,000 stories on 3D printing at Fabbaloo since he launched the venture in 2007, with an intention to promote and grow the incredible technology of 3D printing across the world. So far, it seems to be working!

2 comments

  1. Onliest way to copy-protect something physical is by putting a patent on them. Else there is no way you can copy-protect something. For electronics, I heard about doing everything in-house, and as soon as someone cloned it, release it as open-source. That way the chinese copycats wont have anything because its open-source and everyone can make it.

    Its why a reprap is open-source: You just buy one, and reproduce it yourself. Lego put a patent on its bricks, claiming to be the first who made them.

  2. Onliest way to copy-protect something physical is by putting a patent on them. Else there is no way you can copy-protect something. For electronics, I heard about doing everything in-house, and as soon as someone cloned it, release it as open-source. That way the chinese copycats wont have anything because its open-source and everyone can make it.

    Its why a reprap is open-source: You just buy one, and reproduce it yourself. Lego put a patent on its bricks, claiming to be the first who made them.

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