The State Department interprets and enforces the International Traffic in Arms Regulations, which control[s] the export and import of defense-related articles and services on the United States Munitions List (USML). ITARs regulations implement the provisions of the Arms Export Control Act.
In July of this year, the State Department Directorate of Defense Trade Controls issued a guidance requiring gunsmiths to register as manufacturers with DDTC and pay a $2,250 annual fee, even if they dont export anything. As a group of GOP lawmakers stated in their letter of opposition:
The vast majority of our constituents engaged in gunsmithing make little to no income from their activities and often do it as a hobby or side business. They most certainly do not export firearms. They also do not manufacture firearms in any widely understood sense of the term.
Back in June 2015 the State Department announced a proposal that claimed to be clarifying the rules concerning technical data posted online or otherwise released into the public domain. Technical data includes blueprints, photographs, plans, et cetera. If the rules were interpreted to mean that posting a plan to create a 3-D gun on a blog constituted exportation of technical data, as some State Department bean counters believe, youd have to apply for authorization from the government before posting the information on your blog. If you didnt, the penalty could be up to 20 years in prison or a $1 million fine.
https://www.firearmspolicy.org/blog/what-would-david-petraeus-mean-for-gun-owners/
'Directorate', eh? Classic Orwellian Commie speak.