Colorado Springs, Colo. – The BlindSpotz? technology of CTI
(Chromatic Technologies Inc.) is helping stop product tampering by
inventing the first dual-indicator to detect product tampering from heat
and freezing. The use of extreme temperatures (especially sub-zero
temperatures) to circumvent traditional security measures on packaging
has increased substantially among criminals in recent years, with no
effective deterrent until now.
To date, most tamper indicators
only reveal heat tampering (such as using a heat gun to melt glue on
packaging tape). BlindSpotz? ‘Tamper Freeze’ and ‘Tamper Heat’ inks show
color and messaging when thieves use heat OR cold to tamper with
packages.
The ‘Tamper Heat and Tamper Freeze’ ink technologies from CTI are
designed to protect documents, seals, tape, labels or various packaging
substrates. ‘Tamper Freeze’ inks turn from clear to blue when exposed to
temperatures below -10° C while ‘Tamper Heat’ turns from gray to orange
(or gray to pink) if exposed to heat greater than 65° C.
The
long-time industry standard has been a ‘high-heat’ tamper indicator that
changes color, but now there’s a tool to fight bad actors who use cold
spray, freezing or liquid nitrogen to (1) pull apart a money or document
bag and (2) remove and replace an expired label or bypass security
tape–treated, high-heat irreversible inks.
According to CTI Founder Lyle Small, “Criminals have figured out that
the way to get around high-heat tampering indicators is to ‘go cold’ by
exposing packaging to very low temperatures. This can “delaminate” many
adhesives without activating a tamper-heat indicator.
“The BlindSpotz? ‘Tamper Heat and Tamper Freeze’ inks eliminate both
threats,” Small continued. CTI’s ‘Tamper Freeze’ ink is the only
tamper-evident product on the market to identify sub-freezing tampering.
Additionally, the ‘Tamper Heat’ ink offers multiple advantages
compared to existing high-heat tamper evident inks: (1) they maintain
color if exposed to very high temperatures (greater than 100° C for
instance), (2) Tamper Heat/ Tamper Freeze technology activates within a
5° C window, (3) can be printed with adhesives and over-print varnishes
and (4) will last much longer on the shelf than existing “heat
irreversible” systems, in both wet and printed states.
The ‘Tamper Heat and Tamper Freeze’ inks are part of the BlindSpotz?
technology portfolio from CTI developed to print sensors on-pack to
measure temperature compliance, confirm high pressure processing (HPP)
pasteurization and detect tampering or water damage.
The ‘Tamper Heat-Freeze’ ink is available in UV Flexo and Water-based inks systems.
The Impact of Product Tampering.
With a history dating
back to the late 1890s, the effects of product tampering have been
staggering. The most infamous case of product tampering is the
Tylenol crisis of 1982, in which seven Chicago-area people died after
taking what they thought was extra-strength Tylenol but was in fact
potassium cyanide. The case is still unsolved. One man was later
convicted of extortion, but no one was convicted of the murders. This
event led to new requirements for tamper-evident seals on
over-the-counter medications and changes in US tampering laws.
Sadly, product tampering worldwide has continued: in September 2018,
sewing needles were found inside strawberries in six of Australia’s
seven states. In January 2018, metal pins were found in grocery store
food in Offenburg, Germany, and in September 2017, jars of baby food in
Friedrichshafen, Germany, were laced with ethylene glycol (the
sweet-tasting compound used in antifreeze). The year 2016 saw deadly
baked sweets containing a potent pesticide kill more than 30 people in
Pakistan’s Punjab province following a family argument. And in 2003,
Italian supermarkets were on high alert for several months when “The
Aquabomber” used a syringe to contaminate water bottles with bleach and
acetone. Over a dozen people became sick after drinking the tainted
water.
In Addition to Product Tampering…
Counterfeiting and
piracy are estimated to have a global economic value reaching US $2.3
trillion by 2022. Estimates on the wider social and economic impacts on
displaced economic activity, investment, public fiscal losses and
criminal enforcement could reach an estimated US $1.9 trillion by 2022.
Combined, the negative impacts of counterfeiting and piracy are
projected to drain US $4.2 trillion from the global economy and put 5.4
million legitimate jobs at risk by 2022.
Protecting products
against counterfeiting and tampering is a weighty worldwide concern. In
fact, by some estimates, counterfeit goods account for between 5-7
percent of all world trade, reaching an annual value of over $250
billion at present. All types of products—including pharmaceuticals,
auto parts, toys, software, vintage wines, artwork, airplane parts and
consumer goods—are falling victim to some form of counterfeiting.