Gun with a chip: U.S. Army contracts may lead to a
smarter firearm
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[October 18, 2019] By
Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - A carbine that can call in an
airstrike. A computer-aided scope on a machine gun that can turn just
about anyone into a marksman.Even firearms that measure and record every
movement, from the angle of the barrel to the precise moment of each
shot fired, which could provide law enforcement with a digital record of
police shootings.
The application of information technology to firearms has long been
resisted in the United States by gun owners and law-enforcement
officials who worry they could be hacked, fail at the wrong moment, or
invite government control.
But with the U.S. Army soliciting bids for high-tech battlefield
solutions to create the soldier's rifle of the future, those concerns
may quickly become irrelevant. The Army is moving forward regardless.
One company seeking an Army contract is working on an operating system
that could be embedded into the gun, which could have law-enforcement
and civilian applications that may reshape the U.S. debate about gun
safety.
"You could accomplish some of the functionality by duct-taping an iPhone
to your gun. However what we offer is the world's first truly embedded
operating system," said Melvic Smith, 41, principal owner of Dimensional
Weapons Systems, which bills itself as the first patented blockchain-based
firearms company.
That system could eventually add any number of applications, Smith said,
including "smart gun" technology that would only allow the weapon to be
fired by a designated shooter's hand.
Smart guns in theory could prevent children from accidentally firing
guns at home, or render stolen guns useless.
"Our team is composed of veterans, law enforcement officers, people that
are pro-Second Amendment to begin with," Smith said, referring to the
amendment in the U.S. constitution that grants American citizens the
right to bear arms.
"But we also have engaged with people in the weapons manufacturing
industry. They actually love the technology. They're worried about
political backlash."
One investor interested in the technology said the Army contracts could
"create a market overnight."
"We need disruptive innovation to tackle the gun violence problem," said
Trevor Neilson, chief executive of i(x) investments, which seeks returns
on projects with a positive social impact.
WEAPON OF THE FUTURE
The Army's specifications are that its Next Generation Squad Weapon -
carbines and machine guns - come equipped with a "smart rail," a
communications and power interface between the analog gun and digital
technology.
It has selected three finalists for the contract, to be awarded next
year: defense contractor General Dynamics, firearms manufacturer Sig
Sauer, and industrial conglomerate Textron.
While they battle it out, the Army already is looking toward the next
step, seeking partners to provide the IT.
First it wants a partner to build a fire-control (FC) system, which will
link a soldier's weapon to other systems to help the operator remain
locked on targets, adjusting for atmospheric conditions and range.
Historically used for larger systems such as artillery and antiaircraft
weapons, prototypes for the carbine and machine gun are due by November
4.
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Melvic Smith, CEO of Dimensional Weapons Systems, poses with a
milled dummy of the company's upcoming weapon at the company's
office in College Park, Georgia, U.S., October 11, 2019. Picture
taken October 11, 2019. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage
Then, by the end of the year, the Army will look for Innovative Designs &
Engineering Assessment (IDEA) prototypes, open-ended products of the imagination
that seem only to be limited to what engineers can fit on a chip.
Atlanta, Georgia-based Dimensional Weapons Systems plans to compete for
contracts in both categories with its Camelot operating system, which the
company says will be hackproof by using blockchain, the decentralized ledger of
information used to protect cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.
Smith says his technology will record every movement of a gun, from the angles
it is pointed at to the exact time of every round fired, providing a digital
record that can be used in training or investigations. It could also diagnose
the weapon to indicate when it needs to be repaired or retired from service.
No other companies for the Army's add-on technology contracts have publicly
identified themselves, as companies tend to closely guard their intentions in
such a competitive environment, Smith said.
The Army did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
INNOVATION STALLED
Smart gun technology has convulsed the firearms industry on at least two
occasions.
Gunmaker Smith & Wesson nearly collapsed due to the wrath of gun owners and the
firearms industry when it toyed with the smart gun idea in 2000.
German company Armatix was practically put out of the gun business following a
2014 boycott of its short-lived smart gun by U.S. gun rights advocates who said
it was unreliable, and to protest a New Jersey law that would have required all
gunshops in the state to sell the weapon.
Smart guns have also stalled because of lack of funding. Many investment funds'
covenants prevent them from investing in firearms, while others want to see a
working prototype before committing money.
An Army spokesman said there were a "large number of vendors expressing
interest," ranging from startups to large established government contractors.
"Innovation almost never comes from the people that have been building the same
product for 100 years," Neilson said.
"Whoever gets this right is going to build a massive company."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Paul Thomasch and Sonya Hepinstall)
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