An AI agent that verifies and passports physical products.
Every other passport tool hands you a dashboard and leaves the work to your team. The DPP Company is an autonomous verification agent instead: point it at a product and it authenticates the item, traces its provenance and supply chain, reads its materials and certifications, flags counterfeits, then issues and keeps its Digital Product Passport current — ready for Canada's product-integrity rules today and the EU's incoming passport standard tomorrow — from a single scan, with every finding checkable and anchored on-chain.
See the passport in action.
Watch the verification agent issue a Digital Product Passport for a brand, then a shopper scan it to verify authenticity on a phone — the whole product in one short tour. Then book a live walkthrough with our team.
In Canada, product integrity is already the law.
We're a Canadian company, built for the Canadian market first. Here, authenticity, honest sustainability claims and truthful labelling aren't nice-to-haves — they're enforced. The Combating Counterfeit Products Act makes trafficking in counterfeit goods a civil and criminal offence, and the CBSA can detain suspect shipments at the border. Since June 2024 the Competition Act requires environmental and product claims to be backed by proper testing — with the burden on the seller.
The DPP agent turns each of those obligations into one verifiable record — and it travels. A passport issued in Canada is already aligned with the EU's incoming Digital Product Passport rules (ESPR), so when you expand into Europe you're compliant before the deadlines land, not scrambling after.
- FakesCombating Counterfeit Products ActTrafficking counterfeit goods is a civil and criminal offence — and CBSA can detain suspect imports at the border.
- ClaimsCompetition Act — honest claimsSince June 2024, environmental and product claims must be backed by adequate and proper testing, or they're deceptive marketing.
- LabelsTextile & consumer labellingThe Textile Labelling and Consumer Packaging & Labelling Acts require accurate, verifiable product information.
- RepairRight to repair — C-244 & C-294Federal law now backs repair and interoperability, pushing brands toward longer-lived, traceable products.
- EU →Then the EU, when you expandThe same passport is already aligned with the EU's incoming Digital Product Passport (ESPR) rules.
The agent works a product end to end.
No blockchain expertise required. Point the DPP agent at a product and it authenticates, traces, verifies and issues the passport autonomously.
Authenticates the product
The agent checks the item against issuer signatures and its unique tag, confirms it's genuine — not a replica — and flags anything that doesn't add up as a suspected counterfeit.
Traces provenance & reads certs
It maps the supply chain from origin to shelf, then reads the item's materials, recycled content and certifications — GOTS, GRS, OEKO-TEX and more — verifying each against the record.
Issues & updates the passport
The agent compiles its findings into a Digital Product Passport, links it to a QR or NFC tag, and keeps it current as the item moves or ownership changes — one tap or scan opens the live record.
Most passport tools give you software. We give you the work done.
The hard part of a Digital Product Passport was never hosting it — it's collecting, standardising and verifying product data across a messy, multi-tier supply chain. Platforms hand that job back to you. Our agent does it.
A dashboard you have to run.
You buy the software, then staff it — chasing suppliers, importing spreadsheets, mapping fields and clearing compliance gaps by hand, catalogue after catalogue.
- Integrations to configure and data to reconcile before a single passport ships.
- Authenticity and provenance are fields you populate — not checks the tool performs.
- Keeping every record current as products move or resell becomes ongoing manual work.
An agent that does the work.
Point it at a product or a catalogue. It authenticates, traces, reads the certs and issues the passport itself — and shows its working so every finding is checkable.
- Autonomous, not administrative — it authenticates and traces provenance, it doesn't just store what you type in.
- Compliance as an outcome — Canada-ready, EU-aligned passports fall out of the run, not a separate project.
- Verifiable by design — every finding is anchored on-chain and open to inspection, not locked inside one vendor's dashboard.
What the verification agent can do.
A full agentic workflow — authenticate, trace, verify, passport — grounded in open standards so every finding is checkable.
Authenticates instantly
Checks issuer signatures and the item's tag to confirm it's genuine — not a replica — in a single scan.
Traces the supply chain
Reconstructs a product's journey from origin to shelf, recording each verified step against its passport.
Reads materials & sustainability
Parses material composition, recycled content and environmental data, then verifies it buyers can trust.
Verifies certifications
Reads and validates credentials — GOTS, GRS, OEKO-TEX and more — attaching each to the passport.
Issues & updates passports
Compiles its findings into a Digital Product Passport and keeps it current as the item moves or resells.
Flags counterfeits
Cross-checks tags and records to spot fakes and clones, raising a flag the moment something doesn't add up.
Transfers ownership
Moves verifiable ownership with the item on resale or gifting — powering authenticated second-hand markets.
Anchors it tamper-proof
Every passport the agent issues is written to tamper-proof, on-chain records with content-addressed media — so its findings can't be quietly altered.
Value for the brand — and the buyer.
One agent, two audiences. Brands get compliance and trust on autopilot; buyers get an instant, verifiable answer.
Compliance and trust, handled by the agent.
Turn a regulatory requirement into a brand advantage — without the manual work.
- Compliance, built in — passports that satisfy Canada's product-integrity rules and align with the EU DPP, issued across your catalog.
- Fight counterfeits — automated authentication flags fakes and protects revenue.
- Own the relationship — connect with customers after the sale, not just at checkout.
- Circularity & resale — enable authenticated second-hand and take-back programs.
Ask the agent — get the whole story.
One scan and the agent tells you everything about a product.
- Prove it's real — the agent verifies authenticity before you buy, at the shelf or resale.
- Know its story — see traced origin, materials and sustainability at a glance.
- Care & repair — keep instructions and warranty details attached for the item's life.
- Own with proof — hold verifiable ownership and pass it on when you resell.
Put an AI agent on every product you make.
Book a walkthrough and watch the agent work a live product end to end — authenticate, trace, verify and issue the passport — built for Canada, aligned with the EU DPP, tamper-proof, all from a single scan.
What people ask about the agent.
Straight answers on how the DPP agent works, where it fits, and what it means for compliance.
What exactly is a Digital Product Passport?
A Digital Product Passport (DPP) is a structured, machine-readable record of a physical item — its identity, origin, material composition, certifications, care and repair guidance, and end-of-life instructions. A data carrier on the product itself, a QR code or NFC tag, links the physical item to that record, so anyone can scan it and read the item's full story. The DPP travels with the product for its entire life: as it's resold, repaired or recycled, the passport stays attached and stays current.
What rules does this help me meet — in Canada and the EU?
We're a Canadian company, so the agent is built for Canadian law first. Trafficking in counterfeit goods is a civil and criminal offence under the Combating Counterfeit Products Act, and the CBSA can detain suspect imports at the border for rights holders who file a Request for Assistance. Since June 2024 the Competition Act requires environmental and product claims to be backed by adequate and proper testing or substantiation — and the burden of proof sits with the seller. The Textile Labelling Act and Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act require accurate, verifiable product information, and 2024's right-to-repair bills (C-244 and C-294) push the market toward repairable, longer-lived products. A Digital Product Passport gives you one verifiable record behind all of it. It's also aligned with the EU's Digital Product Passport, mandated by the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) and phasing in by category — batteries first, then textiles, electronics and more — so when you expand into Europe the same passport carries over. The agent tracks these evolving specs rather than hard-coding a single fixed template.
How does the agent authenticate a product and issue its passport?
It runs the product through a full pipeline. First it authenticates: it checks the item's unique tag and identifier against the issuer's signature to confirm it's the genuine article. Then it traces provenance across the supply chain, and reads the item's materials, recycled content and certifications — GOTS, GRS, OEKO-TEX and others — verifying each against the record. Finally it compiles those findings into a Digital Product Passport, pins the images and documents to content-addressed storage (IPFS), and mints a tamper-proof certificate anchored on-chain. The passport is bound to a QR or NFC tag, and the agent keeps it current as the item moves or changes hands. Every step is shown, so each finding is checkable rather than taken on trust.
How does it actually stop counterfeits?
A plain QR code can be photographed and reprinted onto a fake, and it will still resolve to a page. This is different because the tag is only the doorway — behind it is a passport cryptographically bound to a specific, issuer-signed identifier and anchored on-chain. When someone scans a genuine item, the agent confirms the signature matches and the record checks out. When a cloned tag is scanned on a counterfeit, there's no valid issuer signature behind it and nothing legitimate to resolve to: the check fails and the item is flagged as suspected counterfeit instead of quietly passing. The proof lives in the signed, on-chain record, not in the printed square.
What does this look like for a brand?
On the brand side you get a dashboard, but the agent does the heavy lifting. You define a passport template for a product category once — warranty period, carbon footprint, energy and water use, care and end-of-life instructions — and the agent populates, authenticates and issues passports across your catalogue, one product or in bulk. You get compliance with Canada's product-integrity and labelling rules — and EU-DPP alignment for export — without staffing a data-entry team, counterfeit protection that guards revenue, and a direct channel to customers after the sale, plus authenticated resale and take-back programs that extend the product's life and your relationship with the buyer.
And what does the buyer get?
The buyer just taps or scans the tag — no app, no account. In one scan they see whether the item is genuine, where it came from, what it's made of and how sustainable it is, plus care instructions and warranty details that stay attached for the product's life. They can claim verifiable ownership of the item, and when they resell or gift it, that ownership transfers with the passport — so the next owner gets the same proof. It turns a physical product into something a shopper, a reseller or an auditor can independently trust.
Do I need to understand blockchain to use it?
No. The agent handles anchoring in the background — you work with products and passports, not wallets or gas. Records are written on-chain (via the Arianee protocol on Polygon) purely so the agent's findings are tamper-proof and independently verifiable: anyone can confirm a passport without trusting a single company's private database. You get that guarantee without touching the plumbing.
From a team that builds in public.
The DPP agent is in active development, but it's built by a team with a track record of open-source work across the Pandora ecosystem.