Date Published: April 2022
Author(s)
Keith Stouffer (NIST), Michael Pease (NIST), Joshua Lubell (NIST), Evan Wallace (NIST), Connor Freeberg (MITRE), Steve Granata (MITRE), Vivian Martin (MITRE), Andrew Noh (MITRE), Harvey Reed (MITRE)
As supply chains become more complex and the origins of products become harder to discern, efforts are emerging that improve traceability of goods by exchanging traceability data records using blockchain and related technologies. This NIST NCCoE publication explores the issues that surround traceability, the role that blockchain and related technologies may be able to play to improve traceability, and several case studies in use today.
As supply chains become more complex and the origins of products become harder to discern, efforts are emerging that improve traceability of goods by exchanging traceability data records using blockchain and related technologies. This NIST NCCoE publication explores the issues that surround...
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As supply chains become more complex and the origins of products become harder to discern, efforts are emerging that improve traceability of goods by exchanging traceability data records using blockchain and related technologies. This NIST NCCoE publication explores the issues that surround traceability, the role that blockchain and related technologies may be able to play to improve traceability, and several case studies in use today.
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Keywords
Blockchain; Cyber-physical anchor; Decentralized; Pedigree; Provenance; Supply Chain; Traceability
Control Families
None selected