Cody Wilson is a 25-year-old student at the University of Texas at Austinâs School of Law. Heâs well-read, polite, and versed in literature and cinema, particularly the films canonized in the Criterion Collection.
According to Wiredâs Danger Room, heâs also one of the 15 most dangerous people in the world, joining the ranks of notorious figures like Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin âEl Chapoâ Guzman and Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad.
Wilson earned that dubious distinction by heading Defense Distributed, a libertarian collective whose end goal is to design, publish, and distribute âthe wiki weapon,â the worldâs first gun comprised entirely of parts manufactured by a 3-D printer.
The organization also runs and operates Defcad.org, a database site dedicated to hosting and disseminating blueprint files for multiple firearm components. At last count, Defcad hosted 88 different design documents, including ones for a basic hand grenade and an inexpensive silencer dubbed the âDirty Dianeâ in dishonor of Dianne Feinstein, the Democratic Senator from California and chief architect of a gun bill aimed at banning hundreds of assault weapons. On Feb. 19, 2013, Defense Distributedâs Twitter account noted that more than 250,000 files had been downloaded from Defcad during the two months of its existence.
Wilsonâs reasons for launching Defense Distributed are complex, to say the least.
â[I] think armed men are free men,â he stated in a Slashdot video.
Photo via Defense Distributed
In conversation, however, Wilson admitted that heâs ânot overly fascinated by firearms.â
âI own a couple, but itâs not like I collect them,â he told me during a nearly two-hour-long meeting. âItâs its own culture, and Iâm not a joiner.â
Instead, Wilson, a self-proclaimed crypto-anarchist, sees his organization as empowering people by making information freely available.
âI think a lot of people understand the idea that weâre a bastion of freedom and that we have something in common with information anarchists like Aaron Swartz and WikiLeaks,â Wilson told VentureBeat last month. âThe bits must be free.â
âWe believe in the Napsterization of the world,â he added during our meeting.
Wilson also believes that his frequent usage of the term âanarchistâ is what prevented what he calls âRed Statersâ from throwing their support behind Defense Distributed.
âFor a long time, early on, NRA types didnât like us because they saw what we were doing and were afraid that it would only mean more regulation.â
That suspicious sentiment changed somewhat after the Sandy Hook massacre in December, which resulted in the Obama administration urging Congress to pass tighter gun control laws.
The move shifted the tides for Defense Distributed.
âItâs that old adage of âthe enemy of my enemy is my friendâ,â Wilson noted.
On Jan. 17, Glenn Beck invited Wilson to appear on his online show, BlazeTV. For nearly 11 minutes, Beck struggled to grasp what Defense Distributed is trying to accomplish.
âI donât know if weâre friend or foe,â the political pundit told Wilson towards the end of their segment.
Beckâs audience, according to Wilson, didnât have as hard a time deciding. Wilsonâs appearance on BlazeTV led to a surge in contributions to Defense Distributed.
âPeople contribute to us for a variety of reasons,â Wilson said. âThe common unifier lately has been the Second Amendment, but I tell people all the time that weâre not making a Second Amendment argument.â
Photo via Defense Distributed
The libertarian collective has also earned the tenuous support of some members of the Maker community, a do-it-yourself subculture that extols various fields of interest such as robotics and 3-D printing. The movement rose to prominence in the mid 2000s thanks in large part to Make magazine and its corresponding DIY festival, Makerfaire, which is held several times a year across the globe.
âOne of the things that is most attractive to me about 3-D printing is that it causes people to rethink how something could be made without the limitations of traditional manufacturing or engineering constraints, something that Mr. Wilson appears to be trying to do,â said John Biehler, a writer and 3-D printer enthusiast whoâs slated to talk at SXSW on the new technology.
âPeople just assume itâs for evil purposes because his output is a gun.â
For his part, Wilson admits that he hasnât been particularly welcoming to either the gun or Maker communities.
âWeâre polarizing even in our presentation,â he acknowledged. âWeâre not saying this is a good thing. Weâre saying, âPush, push, push.ââ Itâs even more offensive because we donât invite criticism or dialog. Almost every community we offend is because we donât solicit their opinion.â
While Defense Distributed excludes potential allies from voicing their opinions, the company directly antagonizes politicians. Theyâve posted YouTube videos that openly mocked Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosiâs comments after the Sandy Hook shooting and took a shot at Senator Dianne Feinstein.
The most recent example of this is a video uploaded to their YouTube channel that opens with Wilson wielding an AR-15 rifle loaded with a magazine designed by Defense Distributed.
âHowâs that national conversation going?â Wilson mockingly asks the audience, a reference to comments made by Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi days after the Sandy Hook shooting.
In another incident, this time occurring in December 2012, Steve Israel, an anti-gun Democratic congressman representing New Yorkâs 3rd district, called a press conference to announce his intention of renewing the Undetectable Firearms Act of 1988 after he came across another YouTube video of Wilson firing off an AR-15 rifle built around a 3-D lower receiver.
The plastic component only lasted six rounds before it collapsed.
It didnât matter. Israel deemed Defense Distributed a threat.
âWe should act now to give law enforcement authorities the power to stop the development of these weapons before they are as easy to come by as a Google search,â he told members of the press.
Cody Wilson doesnât see Rep. Israel and his ilk as an obstacle. In fact, the only real challenge the crypto-anarchist and his organization face is getting approved for a federal manufacturerâs license. That document will actually allow Defense Distributed to start developing the wiki weapon, something the company hasnât yet done because it would be in direct violation of the National Firearms Act.
The NFA explicitly states that only a licensed manufacturer can produce non-traditional firearms, known as âany other weaponsâ or AOWs. Given that the wiki weapon would be fully undetectable, it would be considered an AOW.
Defense Distributed submitted its application to become a licensed manufacturer in October 2012, but has yet to hear back.
Toward the end of our two-hour-long conversation, it wasnât still clear what Defense Distributed hopes to accomplish. Much like Glenn Beck in his video, I still couldnât really pinpoint the groupâs mission.
âWe want to prove to society that you donât live in a world where you canât have guns,â he began. âWe also donât think that this is the final stage of civic and social organization. People canât even begin to imagine whatâs next.â
- SXSW Panel: Gun Printing with Defense Distributed
- Monday, March 11, 5pm
- Hilton Austin Downtown, Salon FGH (500 E 4th St.)
Photo courtesy of Cody Wilson/Defense Distributed