General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Titanium Rain
Brandon Herrera
comments
Comments by "Titanium Rain" (@ChucksSEADnDEAD) on "I (Accidentally) Made The World’s Most Expensive Pipe Gun" video.
@handlemymember You don't need to protect your IP, it's the online purchases that get you.
3
@TzunSu bruh if you're looking for others' guides on making something why would you need to protect your intellectual property?
2
Gunpowder is used on fireworks and amateur rockets. The moment you stick it down a pipe you're Boston Marathoning it a little bit too much.
2
@itsrass1378 if you make a video of yourself taking commercial smokeless powder, shoving it down a metal pipe and igniting it, it's not going to stay up long.
1
That's just unreasonably conspiratorial, half my favorites and watch later playlists are taken down because of similar issues. It's not a weak excuse, them's the rules nowadays. Yes, we all wish we could go back to the wild west days when you had nitroglycerin tutorials and fresh Iraq war footage.
1
Because reloading is a "whatever" activity (and even then some have had problems with YT), when you start doing things from scratch it gets sketchy. Plus, the big issue is stuffing that stuff down a pipe. If you're just making black powder, could be for fireworks or rockets. Stuff them down a pipe, that's trouble.
1
@riccochet704 With factory components. If you have access to those, you can't be stopped. It's the DIY stuff that gets you in trouble.
1
@riccochet704 Nobody cares. If you can legally buy factory components, you're good. Legal gun owners can buy them in their countries. Precision load development is meaningless, terrorists and teenagers won't do it. When you DIY components, you're teaching people how to make explosives. In this case, a pipebomb.
1
@jakegarrett8109 I don't use my free speech to walk into locations and call everyone a "cunt". Keeping it an inside joke is much funnier than referencing an assassination outright.
1
The federal government of where? Because YT is international and plenty of governments would have seen that as firearms and ammunition.
1
@forceablepizza764 Doesn't matter where you're a citizen. Doesn't matter that it's not a firearm in the US. YT doesn't have to take anything into account, their rules are their rules. Again, the legal definition of "ammunition" in the US doesn't matter, you fire projectiles out of a pipe with a combustible propellant, that's ammunition in most of the world. What you're defining as ammunition is called a "fixed cartridge" and firearms have existed for longer than fixed cartridges have. So clearly, ammunition predates the technology that allows you to press a bullet into a casing. Technically, he made a pipebomb so the argument is moot.
1
@forceablepizza764 How would a US citizen know that? They don't have to. They just have to read the YT guidelines, as confusing as they are. He can't fight, because unfortunately years ago mainstream media wrote hitpieces about YT and people like Royal Nonesuch had to stop making firearms. Even Mark Serbu had a few videos taken down. His AK50 videos show design process and explain how some parts are manufactured, but nothing that resembles an AK50 build guide. Royal Nonesuch and Mark Serbu had nothing to do with Japan, and they had issues before the assassination. So it wasn't heat from Japan. IvanTheTroll also had his account taken down due to the detailed instructions on how to finish his 3d printed designs. Nothing to do with Japan. You can hit at weapons construction, but too many details gets you in trouble.
1
@forceablepizza764 No problem, we all get heated in these trying times.
1