Archive for the ‘Tracing & Tracking’ Category
Monday, January 18th, 2010
Fair Tracing co-investigator Dr Ann Light has just had her paper, ”Barriers to Bridging: Can we cross Global Divides with Trac(k)ing Technology?”, accepted for publication in a special issue on “Labelling the World” of the IEEE journal Pervasive Computing. As she writes:
Product tracking technology is increasingly available to big players in the value chain which connects producers to consumers, giving them new competitive advantages. Such shifts in technology do not benefit small producers, and especially those in developing regions, to the same degree. This paper looks at the practicalities of trying to level the playing field by making a form of tracing technology available for any producer to use. In doing so, it goes beyond considering engineering solutions to examine what happens in the context of use, reporting on work with partners in Chile and India and reflecting on the potential for impact on business and community wellbeing. Reporting on the results of the “Fair Tracing” project, the paper argues that a generic trac(k)ing tool for use with the different commerce systems employed across developing regions is not likely to be useful as such. It concludes with some insights into the tensions that arise in designing a viable socio-technical system around this type of tool and considers what the wider implications may be.
We will keep readers informed as to when the publication appears.
Posted in Chile, Fair Tracing project activities, Fair Tracing publications, India, Tracing & Tracking | No Comments »
Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
The exhibition features retrospective display of Feral Trade goods (2003-present) alongside ingredient transit maps, video, bespoke food packaging and other artefacts from the Feral Trade network.

The exhibition notes tell us:
“The term ‘feral’ denotes the project’s wilful wildness (as in pigeons) as opposed to romantic or nature-wildness (wolves): it offers street-wise survival tactics for urban environments. Since the first registered Feral Trade import of 30kg of coffee direct from the growers in El Salvador to the Cube Microplex in Bristol in 2003, Kate Rich has used social networks to traffic edible produce from around the world. Feral Trade participants become mules, carrying food items with them on trips they would have taken anyway and delivering them to depots (usually friends’ and colleagues’ flats or workplaces) in the growing network.”
“The process is facilitated by an online database, handcrafted by the artist, where couriers log their journeys. This forms the sole physical infrastructure for an alternative freight network, which operates without any material assets (vehicles, staff, communications devices, depots). It enables producers, couriers and buyers to track not only the transit of their own produce but all grocery movements in the network; outputting waybills that document the details of sources, shipping and handling with the kind of microattention that ingredient listings normally receive.”
See/eat it at:
http://www.http.uk.net/exhibitions/FeralTradeCafe/index.shtml
Posted in Events, General, Supply Chains, Tracing & Tracking | 1 Comment »
Monday, June 22nd, 2009
Guiseppe Constanza is completing his MA Communication Design degree at University of the Arts London Central Saint Martins with a project called foodtracer.

Food tracer uses d-touch visual markers which can be read at point of sale with a mobile phone. It is designed to address several “ethical issues” such as carbon cost, packaging, local food, Fair Trade and organic. Many of Guiseppe’s ideas take the thinking behind the Fair Tracing project into exciting new directions. He says: “Fair Tracing has been an importnat source of inspiration for me”.
Have a look at Guiseppe’s project website: http://www.giuseppecostanza.it/foodtracer/index.htm
Foodtracer is also on display at the Central Saint Martin’s 2009 Finalist Exhibition, June 22-25 between 10am -8pm at Candid Arts, 3 Torrens Street, London, EC1V 1NQ
Posted in Data Visualisation, Design, General, Tracing & Tracking, UI | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Journalist Mason Inman from the
New Scientist magazine interviewed Fair Tracing Project Manager
Dr Dorothea Kleine for his article “Barcode’s could reveal your food’s credentials” which has just appeared in this week’s issue. In it, Inman cites the Fair Tracing project:
“Meanwhile, an online initiative called the Fair Tracing Project aims to publicise how farmers in poor countries are treated by the multinational companies that sell their produce in the west. Farmers use mobiles to upload photos and videos “so they can tell a story about the labour conditions they’re working under”, says Fair Tracing team member Dorothea Kleine of Royal Holloway, University of London. Kleine and her colleagues add this to data on how the goods travel from farm to store, including the amount that packagers, shippers, and retailers get paid along the way.
So far they have completed case studies on Chilean wine (see diagram) and Indian coffee. Customers in stores should eventually be able to photograph a product’s bar code with their phone, and be directed to the relevant charts and videos.”
This is the second time Fair Tracing appeared in the New Scientist, and this time we were also able to point to the other projects we collaborate with in the newly formed Ethical Consumer Information System (ECIS) network. Of these, the GoodGuide Project (www.goodguide.com) was also mentioned in the article.
Posted in Chile, Coffee, Coffee Traceability, Fair Tracing publications, General, India, Tracing & Tracking, Wine | 3 Comments »
Thursday, May 7th, 2009



Fair Tracing’s Research Fellow and Project Manager Dr Dorothea Kleine represented the project at ICTD2009, the international IEEE/ACM conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development held in Doha, Qatar from 17-19 April 2009, with over 300 delegates in attendance.
Our demonstration, “Understanding the Provenance of Ethically Produced Goods”, showed the early Fair Tracing computer screen version with the Google Earth map, and used the Upcode application to demonstrate the tool on a mobile screen. We were able to let people use the Nokia N70 or N95 to scan a barcode on a bottle (in Qatar alcohol is banned so we had to go for a water instead of a wine bottle) or a coffee package. The mobile could then go online and link directly to key information from our Fair Tracing data set. Information on offer included the pie chart of “Where does the money go?”, the producer’s website, and the YouTube videos which we have produced in partnership with the Chilean producers.
There was great interest the Fair Tracing demo stand which was up for two days. Over 70 people came to talk to us and try out the demo, including development practitioners from Ecuador, Pakistan, Australia and Egypt.
Tags: conference
Posted in Events, Fair Tracing presentations, Fair Tracing project activities, Technology, Tracing & Tracking, conferences | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 15th, 2009
Browse topics such as 2008′s “Fresh Approaches to Supply Chain Practices”, and 2007′s “Doing Well and Doing Good in the Supply Chain” addressed by major international players.
If anyone is going to this year’s conference and would like to write us a summary, that would be great. Otherwise we will catch up here: http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/ser/resources.html in the fullness of time.
Posted in General, Supply Chains, Tracing & Tracking | No Comments »
Tuesday, March 24th, 2009
I spent an agreeable half hour in my local Sainsbury’s last week. Not shopping but scanning. For some years, some smartphones have been able to read barcodes on products from cola cans to newspapers, but it always seemed like a technology looking for something to do. It is almost two years since I last tried it out on a Nokia N95. So when I discovered that an on-loan T-Mobile phone embracing Google‘s Android operating system had a barcode reader, I thought I would give it another go. Some industry experts think barcodes have reached a tipping point and are about to take off in the west as they have done in Japan, where more than 70% of subscribers use them. I scanned lots of products simply by clicking on the phone’s barcode application, which produces a box with a line through it. After pointing the box at the barcode, it suddenly latches on to it without any need to click and connects to the internet to download data. This is mostly mundane. I clicked on one barcode and up came Old Jamaica ginger beer. Great, but I could find that out simply by looking at the can. It could have had more data, but the manufacturers have chosen not to exploit it.
Does this mean barcodes are dead? Not at all. The reason is they are now changing from being producer-led to consumer-led. The best example is ShopSavvy, which won Google’s Android Developer Challenge. Having scanned a conventional barcode, it not only searches for the best prices for the same product on the internet but is able to use the phone’s GPS function to discover nearby stores with a better price. That could prove popular with recession-conscious shoppers. If you search for ShopSavvy on search.twitter.com, you can get up-to-date information about current bargains even if you don’t have a barcode reader. I described it as a “conventional” barcode because they are often regarded as yesterday’s technology, having been overtaken by so-called 2D or QR (quick response) barcodes of a kind that have gone ballistic in Japan. As Mobile Entertainment reports this month, they are even on tombstones over there, enabling relatives to call up photos and other information about the deceased. Instead of having straight lines of various thicknesses, QR codes are small squares – with lots of data contained in even tinier black squares inside – which, when scanned, take your phone directly to a website or link.
For years I have thought that QR codes could help sustain newspapers and magazines, as you would be able to scan a code at the end of an article to link you directly with an update on it, a video clip or a relevant advert on the web. The Sun tried it over a year ago, and it attracted 11,000 people within a month. This was despite the hassle of downloading the software rather than having a one-click operation with the software already embedded in the phone – as happens with the Nokia and Android models. One of the reasons barcodes haven’t taken off in the UK is that, whereas in Japan the dominant operator in effect imposed a standard, here different companies are peddling their own in the forlorn hope of sweeping all competitors aside. How many times have we heard that before?
Barcode technology is not standing still. Scientists in Australia at Edith Cowan University claim to have developed “dense” barcodes with the capacity to store data for images, ringtones and even video within the barcode itself. So you could point your phone at a dense barcode on, say, the sports pages and “download” a video of a goal to your phone without even going near the internet. Phew. There is a (printed) magazine in Japan called Tada Gets that is composed overwhelmingly of QR codes in various shapes and colours that link to items on the web through your phone. It reverses the paradigm that gives newspaper owners so many sleepless nights. Instead of the web feeding off papers for nothing, punters pay for a magazine that battens off the web.
Posted in Technology, Tracing & Tracking, consumers | No Comments »
Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Ashima Chopra, a research student on the Fair Tracing project, will be presenting a paper on aspects of the project’s India case study at the forthcoming British Association for South Asian Studies (BASAS) conference to be held in Edinburgh from 30 March-1 April 2009. She will also be hosting the panel in which the paper will appear. The full details are as follows:
Monday, 30 March 2009, 4.45 pm – 6.15 pm
“Technology and Development” panel
Convenor: Ashima Chopra (University of Bradford)
- Vincent Bagiire (University of Bradford) Improving livelihoods in the south through technology: M.S.Swaminathan’s contribution
- Bidit Lal Dey (Queen’s University, Belfast) An overview of the use and appropriation of mobile telephony in rural Bangladesh from the perspectives of farmers
- Ashima Chopra, (University of Bradford) Is technological innovation necessary for socio-economic development? Designing a digital traceability solution for coffee growers in Southern India
For further information, see the BASAS website or the conference homepage, or contact Ashima directly at a.chopra@bradford.ac.uk
Posted in Coffee, Coffee Traceability, Events, Fair Tracing presentations, Fair Tracing project activities, General, India, Technology, Tracing & Tracking, conferences | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 11th, 2009
Wired magazine issue 17:03 includes an article on the “10 Best used for RFID Tags“. These include:
1. Saguaro cacti: On the landscaping black market, these succulents sell for more than $1,000. Arizona’s Saguaro National Park plans to use RFIDs to track hot cacti.
2. Indian elephant: The New Delhi forest department requires pet jumbos be chipped to prevent trafficking. No parades until implanted.
3. Surgical sponge: One out of every thousand or so intra-abdominal surgery patients “retains” a sponge. Oops! With SmartSponges, docs can find stowaways by passing a wand over the body.
4. Mexican: Security firm Xega uses GPS chips to track kidnapped people—a pretty big market in a nation where 6,500 were abducted last year.
5. Pirelli tire: A chip inside the new Cyber Tyre transmits info on road conditions and friction coefficients to the car’s computer.
6. Clubber: At Barcelona’s Baja Beach Club, VIPs are injected with RFIDs linked to debit accounts, making wallets passé. Handy when all you’re wearing is a thong.
7. Toky: The city aims to blanket itself with microchips—from bus stops to restaurants. Tourists may soon get maps, schedules, tips, and other info just by waving their cell phones.
8. Police badge: The Blackinton SmartShield badge hides an ID chip, preventing knockoffs. Good idea: Remember Terminator 2?
9. Inmates: Forced to release prisoners due to overcrowding, Britain wants to chip them. Cops would know if, say, a felon enters a school.
10. Cat door: Kitty flaps are great—until you find a possum hanging from your towel rack. The Pet Porte waves through only preapproved critters.
Posted in General, Media, Technology, Tracing & Tracking | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

The clothing company MADE-BY (based in Copenhagen) is “decicated to promoting sustainable clothing manufacture…You can recognise items produced…by the blue button…[Using its Track&Trace technology] you can even find out who made your T-shirt or skirt, and who picked, spun and wove the cotton”. (Source: “Track and Trace: Who made your skirt?”, Jackpot Magazine, Autumn 2008, p 77.)
“MADE-BY Track&Trace follows the trail of your clothes. With the MADE-BY code in your garment you can find out where your garment was made and by whom. In this way, MADE-BY brands open up the doors to the production process…MADE-BY Track&Trace is the very first system to trace the origin of clothes.” (Source: MADE-BY Track&Trace page at http://www.made-by.org/tracktrace.php?lg=en.)

Track & Trace is a database system…for manufacturers that was developed by MADE-BY in collaboration with Organic Exchange and the English IT company Historic Futures. Every link in the production chain enters production information into the database and forwards it to the next link. This gives the brands as direct access as possible to production data from the other suppliers in the chain. Consumers can enter the code found on the clothing label into a simplified consumer page to see who was involved in the production of their clothing”. (Source: ”Track&Trace: what is it?” at http://www.made-by.org/downloads/TrackTrace_EN.pdf)
Posted in Data Visualisation, Design, General, Supply Chains, Technology, Tracing & Tracking, UI, consumers | No Comments »