If anything, that should be a serious incentive to do honest business and treat customers well. Imagine being the only one of your generation known by name to the world 3500 years later... because of an accidentally preserved complaint about your service.
I was going to make a blockchain joke, but it was already in the linked discussion.
It's comical how some of the blockchain space aspires to solve some of the world's problems with underpants-gnomes level business thinking. I guess HN already understands this.
> I was going to make a blockchain joke, but it was already in the linked discussion.
I see what you did there. Nice.
Also, I had to look up "underpants gnome". For the other three of you who don't know what these are they feature in an early episode of South Park (which I thought I'd seen all of, but no). They steal underpants and use them to profit. Turns out they're also the originators of the "1. Something, 2. Something else, 3. ?????, 4. PROFIT!" meme that I've seen posted for the last 20 years, particularly on Slashdot in the early noughties, but never known where it came from.
Not something I expected to learn via HN but I suppose we are living in unusual times.
Yes, I don't see how blockchain technology will solve a problem like this in any way whatsoever. No entry in a blockchain and labelling thereof on containers will prevent breaking the seals on a contain and swapping out real for fakes.
Blockchain may be able solve a few different problems, but this isn't one of them.
I'm probably dumb, but it feels like all the guys pushing blockchain on trying to solve the problem that the world tends to run on trust and good faith, because those things make them deeply uncomfortable.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complaint_tablet_to_Ea-nasir