Could blockchain be the food chain’s answer to romaine lettuce E. coli and other outbreaks?  | Retail | Dallas News

The whole system gets blamed when something spoils or is contaminated with salmonella or E. coli, or a distribution center fails to store product at the right temperature.“

We need to shift this from fault-finding to fact-finding,” Yiannas  said. “If no one is eating romaine, the entire system loses.”

Source: Could blockchain be the food chain’s answer to romaine lettuce E. coli and other outbreaks?  | Retail | Dallas News, Maria Halkias, June 21, 1018

Read More

Following a Tuna from Fiji to Brooklyn—on the Blockchain | WIRED

Gopinath says he sees two major hurdles to bringing blockchain technology to supply chains—and neither of them have to do with the tech itself. The first is simply convincing everyone in the supply chain, which can involve dozens of companies, that switching to a new system is a good idea. “You’ve got to make sure that everybody in the ecosystem gets something out of it,” says Gopinath. “That is very hard and it takes a long time to figure out.”

The second problem is governance. Because blockchains aren’t centralized, it’s difficult to decide how they should be managed. “Who can use the data? Who can see the data? Who can do analytics on the data? Can they share the data? All of these questions have to be answered to the satisfaction of the ecosystem,” says Gopinath. It’s likely going to take years to solve these issues and to square them with government regulators. If someone says that they can be solved in six months, “I’ll just laugh at them, because it’s not going to happen. You can just tell them, sorry, I’m just not going to believe you,” says Gopinath.

Source: Following a Tuna from Fiji to Brooklyn—on the Blockchain | WIRED, Louise Matsakis, May 22, 1018

Read More

BMW, Ford, GM: World’s Largest Automakers Form Blockchain Coalition – CoinDesk

What is required to move those forward, he said, is a decentralized business network.

“You really have to have common standards and common ways for cars to communicate, to identify themselves and make payments,” Ballinger told CoinDesk, adding:

“But if each auto company is trying to develop its own car wallets or its own way of paying tolls, or providing a ride sharing service, it just doesn’t work; it’s the Tower of Babel.”

Dan Harple, the CEO of Context Labs, who is working closely with Ballinger, said the new consortium’s first step will be to establish a “minimum viable ecosystem” for gaining network effect.

Source: BMW, Ford, GM: World’s Largest Automakers Form Blockchain Coalition – CoinDesk, Ian Allison, May 4, 2018

Read More

IBM introduces a blockchain to verify the jewelry supply chain | TechCrunch

“Now we can share this [data] in a permissioned network and we can be sure it’s accurate,” he (Jason Kelley, the GM of blockchain services at IBM) said.

The notion of the permissioned blockchain is an important one here. It means that you have to be allowed on the blockchain to participate, and everyone on the blockchain has to agree to let any members on. “That’s what exciting with TrustChain. Each point in the supply chain has bought into the consortium,” he said.

Source: IBM introduces a blockchain to verify the jewelry supply chain | TechCrunch, Ron Miller, April 26, 2018

Read More

Grocers Embrace Blockchain in New Era of Transparency | Progressive Grocer

“We’ve been very fortunate as an advocate for standards and education in industry to join the ride,” continues Nuce. “We built the UPC or the GTIN as a way for people to have interoperable identification all over the globe. These foundational traceability standards were developed many, many years before blockchain was ever a glimmer in someone’s eye. But now it’s all coming together.”

Source: Grocers Embrace Blockchain in New Era of Transparency | Progressive Grocer, Jenny McTaggart – Feb 16, 2018

Read More

EY – Blockchain-enabled platforms are changing marine for the better – EY – Global

Blockchain-enabled platforms can successfully connect all players in the shipping value chain and advance critical capabilities.

EY and Guardtime, as well as other industry and technology leaders, present the “first of its kind” enterprise-scale platform to integrate and secure the entire stream of disparate data sources involved in insuring shipments around the world.

When risks ebb and flow, should insurance premiums adjust?

Source: EY – Blockchain-enabled platforms are changing marine for the better – EY – Global

Read More