A German inventor is patenting a password-protection system for gun
cartridges, which he claims will make firearms safer by preventing accidental
and unauthorised use.
Herbert Meyerle, who now lives in the US, has applied for a patent designed
to secure ammunition as well as guns with passwords.
Advertisement
Meyerle describes a method by which a passcode entered into the gun itself
would have to match the same passcode stored on the cartridge before the weapon
will fire.
The gun would check for matching codes and then allow the instruction to fire
by means of a radio signal.
At the point of purchase, cartridges could have a code matching the
purchaser's gun written to them.
The gun could then request the code each time it is reloaded, and could
automatically lock after a preset time. Biometric security could also be added
for extra safety.
Although the patent is being pitched as a safety feature, the proposal
received bad press when it appeared on the New Scientist blog.
Many firearms enthusiasts have slammed the idea as overcomplicated and
detrimental to the point of having a gun for defensive purposes.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article