A Digital Product Passport Needs More Standardization And Fewer Standards

As an idea, the digital product passport (DPP) sounds pretty good. Imagine being able to simply scan a QR code on a product to discover all sorts of useful things about it:

A bar of chocolate’s passport could, theoretically, tell you where the cocoa beans were grown and whether the farm complied with Europe’s upcoming Deforestation Regulation; where and when the bar was made; in which countries it’s allowed to be sold; when it should be eaten; and the ways it contributes to the e...

To read the content, please register or login