- cross-posted to:
- buyeuropean@feddit.uk
- cross-posted to:
- buyeuropean@feddit.uk
Some French consumers are looking for ways to do without American products to protest President Donald Trump’s policies on Ukraine. But close trading ties and the nature of multinational companies is making it tough to identify which products to boycott.
There is an app for boycotting companies complicit in Israels crimes called “No Thanks”.
You just have to scan the barcode and it will check it against its database.
It is a pretty straightforward design that should be easy to implement/expand for specifically US products.As a start many of the companies that are boycott targets for their complicity in Israeli crimes are also US-American or heavily involved with the US.
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-palestine-war-google-reinstates-app-boycott-companies
While I wholeheartedly support their idea, one must also note the irony of coordinating action via Facebook.
They can start by not using Facebook (including Instagram and Whatsapp).
Oh how I’d love to get off WhatsApp…
I’m probably on a different part of the world than you are, and I can relate.
I mean… technically it’s easy but it’s a choice of cutting a lot of contacts or having to convince a lot of people
Someone could just point out to them, and any other person looking to identify the origin of a product, this site:
P.S.: It was made in Denmark 🇩🇰❤️
https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/39212308
Sadly Made O’Meter seems to be basically a wrapper for ChatGPT 4o-mini and the quality of the responses reflects that. It will confidently hallucinate incorrect owners for brands. It’s only really reliable for well-known brands that you probably know the origin of anyways
I just tried it out and it generated some bullshit. Apparently it is AI-powered in too many ways.
They also use Google Analytics lol
The plural of “anecdote” is not “data”, I know, but I tried three products (Swedish nicotine pouches, British vitamin supplements, French deodorant) and it got all three perfectly.
I mean, it kind of is though? It’s a handy sentiment, but if you think about it, good data is just a well-curated collection of anecdotes. 🤷
Sorry, bit of a tangent. 😅
The first 3 characters of barcodes means the country of origin.It won’t tell the nationality of the owner of the factory, but you can see where it was packaged, if there are no other clues it can help. Here is the full list. Basically if the first number is 0, 1 or 2, there is a big chance it’s from the us.
According to your link
GS1 prefixes do not identify the country of origin for a given product.