You can change the law after someone kills a lot of people, so the product is still legal till that happens.
US bans 'bump stock' gun device used in Las Vegas mass shooting
Image caption Bump-stocks attach to semi-automatic rifles to increase the firing rate
The Trump administration has banned the use of bump stocks, devices that let rifles fire like machine guns, after promising to do so earlier this year.
The final date to destroy or turn in the devices is 21 March, said White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.
The push to ban bump stocks followed the deadly mass shootings in Las Vegas in October 2017 and Parkland, Florida in February.
Pro-gun advocates have said they are prepared to fight the rule in court.
Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker signed the new regulation on Tuesday, and it is expected to be published in the Federal Register on Friday.
Bump stocks, or slide fire adapters, allow semi-automatic rifles to fire at a high rate, similar to a machine gun, but can be obtained without the extensive background checks required of purchasing automatic weapons.
Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock used a bump stock to fire rapidly into the crowd, killing 58 last year.
Following the Las Vegas shooting, lawmakers began discussing a ban on the devices.
Media captionA guide to the weapons available in the US and the rate at which they fire
Shortly after, President Donald Trump directed the Department of Justice to look into changing regulations so that bump stocks would be classified as machine guns, which are illegal to possess in most cases.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) had previously ruled that bump stocks did not qualify as machine guns and thus would not be regulated.
What do gun advocate groups say?
The Gun Owners of America lobby issued a statement on Tuesday saying they have prepared a lawsuit against the ATF and the justice department on behalf of the "half a million bump stock owners" forced to part with their "valuable property".
"Agencies are not free to rewrite laws under the guise of 'interpretation' of a statute, especially where the law's meaning is clear," said Erich Pratt, executive director of Gun Owners of America.
The National Rifle Association (NRA), which had called for a review of bump stock devices after the Las Vegas shooting, said they were "disappointed" with the new ban, according to the Associated Press.
An NRA spokeswoman said the government should offer amnesty to current owners.
The Trump administration is ready for any lawsuits, officials told reporters on a call earlier on Tuesday, according to US media.
Media captionThe American teachers armed against gun crime
What are bumpstocks?
Since 1986, it has been relatively difficult for civilians to buy new, fully automatic weapons, which reload automatically and fire continuously as long as the trigger is depressed.
It is also illegal to modify the internal components of semi-automatic rifles - which typically manage about 60 aimed shots per minute - to make them fully automatic.
Gun owners can instead legally buy accessories to increase the rate of fire, like the bump stock.
Bump stocks harness a rifle's recoil, They replace the weapon's stock, which is held against the shoulder, and allow the rest of the rifle to slide back and forward with every shot despite having no mechanical parts or springs.
The motion makes the trigger collide with, or bump, the shooter's finger as long as they apply forward pressure with the non-shooting hand and rearward pressure with the shooting hand.
Administration officials said that the devices are not extremely common, but there are probably tens of thousands nationwide, US media reported.
US bans 'bump stock' gun device used in Las Vegas mass shooting
- 19 December 2018
Image caption Bump-stocks attach to semi-automatic rifles to increase the firing rate
The Trump administration has banned the use of bump stocks, devices that let rifles fire like machine guns, after promising to do so earlier this year.
The final date to destroy or turn in the devices is 21 March, said White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.
The push to ban bump stocks followed the deadly mass shootings in Las Vegas in October 2017 and Parkland, Florida in February.
Pro-gun advocates have said they are prepared to fight the rule in court.
Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker signed the new regulation on Tuesday, and it is expected to be published in the Federal Register on Friday.
Bump stocks, or slide fire adapters, allow semi-automatic rifles to fire at a high rate, similar to a machine gun, but can be obtained without the extensive background checks required of purchasing automatic weapons.
Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock used a bump stock to fire rapidly into the crowd, killing 58 last year.
Following the Las Vegas shooting, lawmakers began discussing a ban on the devices.
- Republicans open to ban on gun device
- How Vegas gunman sped rifles' fire rate
- America's gun culture in 10 charts
Media captionA guide to the weapons available in the US and the rate at which they fire
Shortly after, President Donald Trump directed the Department of Justice to look into changing regulations so that bump stocks would be classified as machine guns, which are illegal to possess in most cases.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) had previously ruled that bump stocks did not qualify as machine guns and thus would not be regulated.
What do gun advocate groups say?
The Gun Owners of America lobby issued a statement on Tuesday saying they have prepared a lawsuit against the ATF and the justice department on behalf of the "half a million bump stock owners" forced to part with their "valuable property".
"Agencies are not free to rewrite laws under the guise of 'interpretation' of a statute, especially where the law's meaning is clear," said Erich Pratt, executive director of Gun Owners of America.
The National Rifle Association (NRA), which had called for a review of bump stock devices after the Las Vegas shooting, said they were "disappointed" with the new ban, according to the Associated Press.
An NRA spokeswoman said the government should offer amnesty to current owners.
The Trump administration is ready for any lawsuits, officials told reporters on a call earlier on Tuesday, according to US media.
Media captionThe American teachers armed against gun crime
What are bumpstocks?
Since 1986, it has been relatively difficult for civilians to buy new, fully automatic weapons, which reload automatically and fire continuously as long as the trigger is depressed.
It is also illegal to modify the internal components of semi-automatic rifles - which typically manage about 60 aimed shots per minute - to make them fully automatic.
Gun owners can instead legally buy accessories to increase the rate of fire, like the bump stock.
Bump stocks harness a rifle's recoil, They replace the weapon's stock, which is held against the shoulder, and allow the rest of the rifle to slide back and forward with every shot despite having no mechanical parts or springs.
The motion makes the trigger collide with, or bump, the shooter's finger as long as they apply forward pressure with the non-shooting hand and rearward pressure with the shooting hand.
Administration officials said that the devices are not extremely common, but there are probably tens of thousands nationwide, US media reported.
Thats a very poor comparison. The normal feature of a gun is to shoot and it is expected that guns kill. Ninja trading platform or multicharts is expected to normally handle pricing data and submit orders to a connected broker. The platforms can be abused but certainly was the platform never written to assist in any sort of abuse.
Now if we speak of guns that, for example, have a built in switch that can be turned and the gun converts into a fully automatic rifle then your comparison is fairer. But in this case the gun manufacturer should be held accountable that it deliberately designed a gun with illegal features in mind, it just concealed it intelligently