A Smartphone Can Copy a 3D Model By Just Recording the Sounds of a 3D Printer

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With an experiment that’s not going to help alleviate any concerns over 3D printing and piracy, researchers at the University of California Irvine have proven that they can copy a 3D model, with surprising accuracy, by simply recording the sounds that another 3D printer makes while it’s making it.

The servos, pumps, and extruders that power a 3D printer produce a symphony of mechanical sounds as it’s printing away. And all those sounds tell a story of how the machine’s printing head is moving around as well as how much plastic filament is being extruded from the nozzle on every pass.

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3D models can be encrypted and electronically protected so that they can’t be downloaded, opened, or sent to a 3D printer which helps protect intellectual property. But with everyone carrying smartphones these days, there’s little that can be done to prevent someone from covertly recording the sounds of a 3D printer at work. Although, they’d need to make sure they recorded the entire printing process, which can sometimes take days.

The team of researchers at UCI’s Advanced Integrated Cyber-Physical Systems Lab, led by Mohammad Al Faruque, were able to recreate a 3D-printed key-shaped object with 90 percent accuracy using the sound copying and processing technique they developed. And if you want to dive into the nitty-gritty about how the process works, check out this video that lays it all out. It’s a little heavy for a Friday morning but still completely fascinating.

[University of California Irvine via Gizmag]


Contact the author at andrewL@gizmodo.com.