Josephus wrote:Lauren wrote:Hux, I know the anxiety you must feel, trying to be the first to come up with a unique tool (something that you can call your own), just to find out that you re-invented the wheel. As a locksmith tool inventor, I wouldn't dream of ever patenting anything. Many of my tools I kept in the dark for years. There's too many sharks waiting to bite as soon as you go public. And yet, there will always be that persistent urge to share your inventions with the locksmith community or even the lock manufacturers that needs to be somehow satisfied. Great video.
Lauren Arndt
For my part I don't have anything novel to offer the physical security world. Different field, otherwise the same. I have sat on some things for years now. The pile is growing.
There is this handwritten one-word warning always up on my desk to keep things in check: Furtive.
Lauren, it is such a difficult dilemma, isn't it? Merely saying you have a tool that does x or y is enough to alert others to the fact that it is possible, which could lead to losing the idea, without ever even publicising the tool itself. And yet I really, really hate having to keep my best work hidden from view...but that is the reality right now and it is so very fucking frustrating. I know it is easy to say this, but you should see some of the stuff I have squirrelled away. Completely new NDE methods (or should I say, completely new NON-PUBLIC methods) of opening pin tumblers and lever locks and disc detainers...all sorts of crazy shit.
Josephus, I too sit on ideas and tools for years sometimes...but again, this can be a bad idea; I have an MCS opening system that has been sitting in Lockfall Towers for a few years, waiting until such a time as I can leverage it. But the fantastic Draukan found the same vulnerability, put it up on Youtube and now not only have I had to find a new method, but all that work and all that 'sitting on the tool' has been for (effectively) nothing now.
And yet doing the opposite, and making your work public can lead to even worse consequences. Like my Abloy Classic Pick/Decoder - it was only up here on KP for about 3 weeks and it had already been declassified from its secret status and for sale to the public. I asked everybody I knew if such a thing already existed and to a man, everybody said "no". I scoured long and hard, searching for any clue that the tool might already exist. There was none. So, confident I was doing something original, I embarked on a 6 year-long process that cost me a LOT of time, energy and money. Guess fucking what, it was there the whole bastard time. And not just the Safe Ventures tool either. Some of the guys I asked are/were (RIP Chris Belcher, you were a massive inspiration to me) very old, respected toolmakers from the UK, a couple of which do work for intelligence agencies. Nobody knew a thing about it.
I often equate it to artwork (because I consider the design and creation of locktools a form of artwork); imagine Mozart spending years writing his life's masterpiece. He unveils it at a grand ceremony to many plaudits. Then, a week later, Johan Strauss knocks on his door and tells him that his wonderful oeuvre is a total rip off of his own work, composed many years before. Whilst I do not place myself in the relative league of Mozart, I think my point still stands. I found the whole thing very distressing. I found it soul destroying.
So to summarise, it is not something that I will ever let happen again. Any stuff that I have shown since then are old versions of tools, very early prototypes or heavily redacted/obfuscated. Many of my concepts/techniques are still completely in the dark. So how do you get around this dilemma? Keep making stuff that only you will ever see or get to use? That is such a waste. I hate the way many of the government secret stuff never sees the light of day, if I were the inventor of some of that incredible stuff, I'd have to be pretty damn well compensated for that.
Jaakko Fagerlund wrote:Greets to Camlock company, I'll be making a tool for your stupid octagon shaped locks. Yours truly, Hold-My-Beer
Lol, shhh Jaakko, their revolutionary re-design of the tubular lock centre-post is FAR too complicated to make a tool for!