I don't mean to pick on you, but still wondering where your coming from.
The smart bullet has been invented. All you have to do is get the target identified in the scope and pull the trigger. The bullet will do the rest. Clean kill with no skill.
If allowing average hunter to make clean kills is the consideration then that should be OK>
Making animals harder to find will happen because technology will make killing too easy. WE might have already reached that point.
No worries, I'm not the best on articulating my thoughts. Plus, hey, everyone is allowed to disagree.
About the smart bullet thing: I wouldn't really have a problem with it (we'll see how much heat I take for that statement). It might remove a fair amount (or most, or all) of the skill in the shooting portion, but in my mind, that is a very small portion of what it takes to hunt an animal between research, scouting, tracking, glassing, calling, stalking, and a number of other skills.
It isn't just the physical tools that are improving either, but the distribution of information. The techniques and methods that people use to find game have improved substantially over the past few decades, and the internet has only accelerated that. It is now easier than ever for someone who has never hunted before, or someone who is very casual about the endeavor, to find information about how, when, and where to find game. This means the barrier to entry is lower, and the success rate for that group of people is probably better than it would have been otherwise. (This does bring up something that is interesting to me: We always say that we need more young people hunting, that we don't want the sport to die out, but at the same time we complain that areas are overhunted or that game numbers are down. It seems to me that there is both a lower and upper limit to the number of hunters this place can support. Too few and it dies out, too many and it implodes upon itself. If we are concerned that we are killing too many animals, there is a hard limit that wildlife agencies can enact: limiting the number of tags. This entire idea is kind of jumbling around in my head and I might expand upon it once I can lay it out in a more coherent fashion.)
Back on topic -
I'll agree that advancements of technology have made it easier to kill animals, but I have a hard time identifying an arbitrary line of "we should use this technology on a gun or bow but this other one should not be allowed". There are multiple steps in the process of hunting an animal, and I would prefer one of the ones in the middle of the process more difficult, instead of the one at the very end.