When shopping online or at the mall, it’s easy to figure out a product’s price and the basic materials from which it’s made. It’s much harder to find out where it came from and how it was produced. Filling that information gap is the goal of a startup called Provenance , and it’s using the technology that underpins Bitcoin to do it.

“We are a software company. We don’t sell any products, we’re not a certifier or anything. Our real mission is transmitting information,” says founder Jessi Baker, a 30-year-old who has a background in manufacturing, design, and engineering.





Many companies are working to clean up their supply chains today–or at least be more open about them. Intel is ridding its chips of conflict minerals. Unilever won’t use rainforest-destroying palm oil. More and more, clothing manufacturers are promising strict standards for working conditions in their foreign factories. These are pledges often spurred by activists, socially-responsible investors, and, in some cases, regulators, as well as the growing number of ethically-minded consumers who care about how their purchases are sourced.

Baker, who finished her PhD at the University of Cambridge (sponsored through a fellowship from Intel), believes there’s a need for a more independent, easy-to-use system for companies to transmit details about their supply chains, as well as better ways for consumers to learn the stories behind the products they buy, especially when shopping online.

With Provenance, she is building software that will help progressive companies gain a competitive edge by sharing the processes and materials that go into their products. The site will look friendly, with photos and text where consumers can track, for example, how their t-shirt was made, from cotton field to freighter ship to store shelf. Companies that use it will be able to embed the stories into their product sales pages.

The interesting piece of the platform is on the backend. The stories won’t just be the glossy marketing materials that are provided by the company trying to sell the product or centralized databases maintained by an industry group. Nor will they be obscure third-party certifications that are not transparent themselves (and often confusing to consumers).

Provenance’s approach is different. The system is built on Bitcoin’s blockchain technology, the main innovation that allows the decentralized cryptocurrency to function. Before Bitcoin, digital records were easily copied and open to fraud (that’s why a digital currency couldn’t exist). A blockchain creates a public ledger that tracks each transaction in a linear, chronological order–each computer on the network has a copy of the transaction database, so fraud isn’t possible.