The beginning of the industrial age marked a dramatic sea change in human society that altered the entire course of the planet, both socially and economically. For thousands of years, humanity was a maker economy founded on the principles of individual artisans and craftsmen supplying their community with the goods that they needed to survive, with only unusual or locally unavailable products being imported, often at great expense. Economies were mostly local, and fueled almost entirely by their own populations’ ability to serve the needs of themselves or their neighbors. But industrialization and mass production devastated local economies and pulled them kicking and screaming into global economies.
These global economies have, for the most part, served us pretty well. They transformed us into, what I believe to be, far better societies that are connected by globally shared interests and technology that eliminates the fear of the unknown from our neighbors near and far. While many would argue that the world is a far darker place today than it was a thousand years ago, I believe that to be rather naive, and clearly ignorant of our planet’s history. Every advancement brings with it a series of downsides, it is both inevitable and simply part of the way that society works. But while mass industrialization transformed us into, as Hornick calls it, buyers not makers, it has also brought with it the lowest number of global citizenry living in poverty in all of recorded history. The world will never be perfect, but advancing into the industrial age has inarguably left humanity as a whole better off than our predecessors in many of the ways that truly matter.
But as industrialization now becomes the norm, once again, humanity’s ability to evolve and outgrow the old ways of doing things is once again threatening to alter the world on a massive scale. Hornick believes that 3D printing technology will change us from buyers back into the makers that we once were, simply makers with a much different community to service. When you can make anything in your own home, why would you pay someone else to make it for you? And while the idea of 3D printers that can produce virtually anything that we need is still a ways off, it is at this point an inevitability. We are closer than ever to 3D printable electronics, 3D printing with multiple, combinable materials and the ability to 3D scan and replicate products from the home. Intellectual property, Hornick says, is becoming irrelevant and will be replaced with customization.
It is worth noting that Hornick isn’t alone in projecting such a radical shift in the way that intellectual property and manufacturing will work. His thoughts were echoed at another presentation from the Inside 3D Printing Conference by Husch Blackwell partners San Digirolamo and Brandan Mueller. In their excellent presentation called The Shape of Things to Come – Strategies for Success in the Age of 3D Printing they touched on the eventual and inevitable changes that the democratization of manufacturing that will come with the advancement of 3D printing technology. Digirolamo, Mueller and Hornick all seem to be on the same page when it comes to the disruptive effects that having no entry barriers and no economy of scale paired with cost neutral complexity and customization will have on manufacturing and mass production.
All this being said, it will be a while before any of this happens, and it isn’t likely that the current owners of most intellectual properties will go quietly, especially not with current copyright patent laws firmly on their side. Technology research and analysis firm Gartner is projecting that by 2018 3D printing related intellectual property losses and lawsuits will reach 100 billion dollars. And while the last few years we’ve seen 220 3D printing related patents expire and opened up to the open source community, there are still over 12,000 patents hanging around. So we’re still decades away both technologically, and culturally from this shift, but just as IKEA killed the local furniture maker, it seems that 3D printing will kill traditional manufacturing and distribution.
John Hornick gives presentations on 3D printing technology and how it relates to intellectual property at 3D printing and tech conventions all over the world, so if you are given the opportunity to hear him speak make sure that you take it. I can’t recommend it enough. Hornick is also releasing a book next month called 3D Printing Will Rock the World on the very subject, so iIll be covering his thoughts and insights more in depth next month. Discuss this story in the 3D Printing IP forum thread on 3DPB.com.