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![]() Scantrust logo since 2020 | |
Company type | Privately held company |
---|---|
Industry | Software as a service |
Founded | 2013 |
Founder | Justin Picard, Nathan J. Anderson, Paul Landry |
Headquarters | , |
Services | Brand protection, supply chain traceability, smart packaging |
Website | www |
Scantrust is a Swiss company that provides an Internet of things platform for identifying products on the internet. [1]
Scantrust offers traceability for various industries, such as luxury goods, [2] food products,[ citation needed ] industrial machines, [3] water filters, cables, [4] agrochemical products, [5] and fiscal stamps. [6] Nathan J. Anderson is the CEO. [7]
Justin Picard, Nathan J. Anderson, and Paul Landry founded Scantrust at the end of 2013. [8] [9] A seed round led by SOSV was raised in 2015, [10] [11] and a series A led by Credit Suisse was raised in 2017. [12] [13] [14] In 2016, the company concluded a partnership with Agfa-Gevaert to integrate its technologies into Agfa's security software. [15] [16] In 2017, the National Seeds Institute of Argentina released a fiscal stamp printed with Scantrust secure QR Code. [6] In 2018, the company entered into a partnership with Hyperledger and began offering services using Hyperledger Sawtooth. [17] In 2019, the Dutch Standards organisation NEN announced they would use Scantrust secure QR codes to ensure the authenticity of their certificates. [18] The same year, Scantrust entered into a partnership with HP Indigo for labels printed with HP commercial printers. [19] In 2020, Scantrust entered into a partnership with SAP [20] to deliver end-to-end traceability.[ citation needed ]
The company has developed a QR Code system with an additional layer of protection against copying, based on inserting a copy detection pattern or secure graphic which loses information when it is copied. [21] [14] The technology does not require special materials, inks, and modifications to printing equipment to implement. [22] Related product authentication and traceability data can be stored into a blockchain. [23]
QR codes used in Scantrust authentication and traceability systems are printed on product packaging and scanned with a smartphone to authenticate and track products. [24] [25] The company provides a free app to consumers which can be used to scan products with the copy detection pattern and help detect counterfeits. [26] [27] [28] Scanning of a code with a smartphone can also offer a traceability feature with origin and supply chain information made about the product made available [29] [30] An enterprise app is also provided for employees, distributors and forensic inspections. [31]
Authentication is the act of proving an assertion, such as the identity of a computer system user. In contrast with identification, the act of indicating a person or thing's identity, authentication is the process of verifying that identity. It might involve validating personal identity documents, verifying the authenticity of a website with a digital certificate, determining the age of an artifact by carbon dating, or ensuring that a product or document is not counterfeit.
A counterfeit is a fake or unauthorized replica of a genuine product, such as money, documents, designer items, or other valuable goods. Counterfeiting generally involves creating an imitation of a genuine item that closely resembles the original to deceive others into believing it is authentic.
A QR code is a type of two-dimensional matrix barcode, invented in 1994, by Japanese company Denso Wave for labelling automobile parts. It features black squares on a white background with fiducial markers, readable by imaging devices like cameras, and processed using Reed–Solomon error correction until the image can be appropriately interpreted. The required data is then extracted from patterns that are present in both the horizontal and the vertical components of the QR image.
In the distribution and logistics of many types of products, track and trace or tracking and tracing concerns a process of determining the current and past locations of a unique item or property. Mass serialization is the process that manufacturers go through to assign and mark each of their products with a unique identifier such as an Electronic Product Code (EPC) for track and trace purposes. The marking or "tagging" of products is usually completed within the manufacturing process through the use of various combinations of human readable or machine readable technologies such as DataMatrix barcodes or RFID.
The folding carton created the packaging industry as it is known today, beginning in the late 19th century. The process involves folding carton made of paperboard that is printed, laminated, cut, then folded and glued. The cartons are shipped flat to a packager, which has its own machinery to fold the carton into its final shape as a container for a product. Some styles of folding cartons can be made of E-flute or micro-flute corrugated fiberboard.
Mobile tagging is the process of providing data read from tags for display on mobile devices, commonly encoded in a two-dimensional barcode, using the camera of a camera phone as the reader device. The contents of the tag code is usually a URL for information addressed and accessible through Internet.
A digital copy is a commercially distributed computer file containing a media product such as a film or music album. The term contrasts this computer file with the physical copy with which the digital copy is usually offered as part of a bundle. It allows the disc's purchaser to acquire a single copy of the film on a digital device such as a personal computer, smartphone, tablet computer, or digital media player, and view it on those devices without requiring access to the physical media. "Digital copy" is also commonly referred to as "Digital HD".
Brand protection is the process and set of actions that a right holder undertakes to prevent third parties from using its intellectual property without permission, as this may cause loss of revenue and, usually more importantly, destroys brand equity, reputation and trust. Brand protection seeks primarily to ensure that trademarks, patents, and copyrights are respected, though other intellectual property rights such as industrial design rights or trade dress can be involved. Counterfeiting is the umbrella term to designate infringements to intellectual property, with the exception of the term piracy which is sometimes (colloquially) used to refer to copyright infringement.
The terms active packaging, intelligent packaging, and smart packaging refer to amplified packaging systems used with foods, pharmaceuticals, and several other types of products. They help extend shelf life, monitor freshness, display information on quality, improve safety, and improve convenience.
Produce traceability makes it possible to track produce from its point of origin to a retail location where it is purchased by consumers.
Digimarc Corporation is a provider of enterprise software and services. The company's software, which includes digital identifiers, is designed to address counterfeiting, product authenticity, recycling accuracy, and supply chain traceability. Digimarc products are created for multiple industries such as apparel, consumer packaged goods, health and beauty, and automotive.
A blockchain is a distributed ledger with growing lists of records (blocks) that are securely linked together via cryptographic hashes. Each block contains a cryptographic hash of the previous block, a timestamp, and transaction data. Since each block contains information about the previous block, they effectively form a chain, with each additional block linking to the ones before it. Consequently, blockchain transactions are irreversible in that, once they are recorded, the data in any given block cannot be altered retroactively without altering all subsequent blocks.
Hyperledger is an umbrella project of open source blockchains and related tools that the Linux Foundation started in December 2015. IBM, Intel, and SAP Ariba have contributed to support the collaborative development of blockchain-based distributed ledgers. It was renamed the Hyperledger Foundation in October 2021.
The distribution of medications has special drug safety and security considerations. Some drugs require cold chain management in their distribution.
ISO 22300:2021, Security and resilience – Vocabulary, is an international standard developed by ISO/TC 292 Security and resilience. This document defines terms used in security and resilience standards and includes 360 terms and definitions. This edition was published in the beginning of 2021 and replaces the second edition from 2018.
ISO 22382:2018 Security and resilience – Authenticity, integrity and trust for products and documents – Guidelines for the content, security and issuance of excise tax stamps, is an international standard developed by ISO/TC 292 Security and resilience and published by the International Organization for Standardization in 2018.
ISO 22382 is a guidance document that provides various of recommendations for the content, security, issuance and examination of physical tax stamps. The purpose of the standard is to avoid counterfeited products and ensure that the required taxes have been paid for, for example on items as tobacco and alcohol. The recommendations includes:
Voatz is a for-profit, private mobile Internet voting application. The stated mission of Voatz is to "make voting not only more accessible and secure, but also more transparent, auditable and accountable." The company is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts.
A copy detection pattern (CDP) or graphical code is a small random or pseudo-random digital image which is printed on documents, labels or products for counterfeit detection. Authentication is made by scanning the printed CDP using an image scanner or mobile phone camera. It is possible to store additional product-specific data into the CDP that will be decoded during the scanning process. A CDP can also be inserted into a 2D barcode to facilitate smartphone authentication and to connect with traceability data.
OpenSC is a company and digital platform that tracks individual products throughout their supply chain. It uses the data to verify companies' sustainable production claims. Consumers can then view the product's history by scanning a QR code with their mobile device. OpenSC was launched in 2019 as a joint venture by World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Australia and BCG Digital Ventures.
Justin Picard is a Swiss-Canadian engineer and entrepreneur who currently serves as the chief technology officer of Scantrust, a company he co-founded in 2013. He is the inventor of the copy detection pattern (CDP), a digital authentication technology for detecting product and document counterfeiting.
ScanTrust provides a blockchain-based IoT platform that connects products and packaging using secure unique identifiers
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)Specifically, compared with the existing CDP(Copy Detection Pattern)-based approaches (represented by the ScanTrust technology [5], [13]–[15]), the contributions of the proposed authentication scheme can be summarised as follows.
By scanning the QR-code you access the product information stored in the blockchain. ScanTrust is a solution[ buzzword ] with patented QR-codes that can't be reprinted and put on another product. Therefore, a sealed bag with a scannable ScanTrust QR-code contains the same products during all stages of the supply chain.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)