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    Retail Giant Target Is Quietly Working on a Blockchain for Supply Chains







    Retail giant Target has quietly entered the blockchain space.


    Since mid-2018 the Minnesota-based retailer has been working on a
    blockchain-powered solution for supply chain management, dubbed ConsenSource. More recently it pledged to support the Hyperledger Grid project, a supply chain framework that earlier saw participation from food giant Cargill, one of Target’s suppliers, together with tech giant Intel and blockchain startup Bitwise.io.




     


    To boost its distributed ledger technology-related work, Target is
    now looking for a blockchain engineer and systems developer, according
    to the company’s career page.



    The new engineer will be contributing to the recently open-sourced
    ConsenSource and to Hyperledger Grid, developing “distributed ledger
    systems, protocols, smart contracts, CLI’s, and RESTful APIs in an open
    source environment,” the job posting says.



    “I’m proud that Target will support the Hyperledger Grid project, and
    that we’re committing dedicated engineering resources to build out
    components in the Grid architecture,” Joel Crabb, Target’s vice
    president of architecture, wrote in a little-noticed post on its corporate blog.



    The ConsenSource project, which Target recently open-sourced, was
    primarily focused on the certification of suppliers for the company’s
    own paper manufacturing. Target has been “working directly with the
    forest managers and certification boards” studying the technology and
    trying to figure out what data can be shared on a distributed ledger,
    Crabb wrote.



    The exploration led to Target to recognize the benefits of open-source projects – and supporting some.


    The blog reads:



    “Many companies – including Target – see the most
    potential for enterprise blockchain initiatives as open source.
    Open-source projects require all participating parties to define the
    governance model collectively from the outset, so companies then can
    focus their time working on blockchain-based solutions that will lead to
    greater speed, transparency and cost savings.”

    Target did not respond to CoinDesk’s requests for comment by press time.



    Secret R&D


    Until now, Target has largely flown under the radar with its
    blockchain initiatives. The company hired Aarthi Srinivasan – who has previously worked at JPMorgan and IBM – as its director of product management for personalization, machine learning and blockchain, in 2016.



    In December 2018, CoinDesk learned from a source within Hyperledger
    that Target – the eighth-largest retailer in the U.S. – had been working
    on a supply chain product under the umbrella of the open-source
    Hyperledger consortium.



    The source, who did not want to be identified, said Target would join
    the Sawtooth Supply Chain project, which is developing a distributed
    application to track the provenance of food and other assets using the
    Sawtooth implementation of Hyperledger.



    Emily Fisher, a spokesperson for the Linux Foundation, which oversees
    Hyperledger, said Monday: “Target has made code contributions but is
    not a member of Hyperledger.”



    While it is still in the development phase and far from reaching
    production, the Sawtooth project has been a hotbed of coding activity,
    with more than 5,000 commits from 46 contributors on GitHub. According
    to the ConsenSource GitHub repository, that project uses the Sawtooth
    code.



    Among Target’s notable moves has been incorporating identity
    verification technology from another Hyperledger project called Indy.
    Cargill, the food production giant, is also known to be involved in the supply chain project.



    The Sawtooth codebase, which was contributed to Hyperledger by Intel,
    is the main alternative to Fabric, the best-known Hyperledger
    implementation, developed by IBM. Fabric is already being used in food
    tracking on a network called Food Trust – a project spearheaded by IBM
    and Target’s big-box rival, Walmart.



    In its last annual report to shareholders, Target said it is investing in supply chain improvements.


    The company is “in the process of a broad migration of many
    mainframe-based systems and middleware products to a modern platform,
    including systems supporting inventory and supply chain-related
    transactions,” the company said, without mentioning blockchain or DLT.



    Update (June 14, 16:05 UTC): This article was updated with a comment from Hyperledger clarifying Target’s relationship to the consortium.


    Target image via Shutterstock



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