Cross-enterprise coordination
without surrendering your data.
Quantum Fabric™ is the first platform that assembles supply chain visibility and traceability across independent organizations — with privacy controls enforced by the architecture itself, not by policy.
The coordination gap no one has solved
Enterprise supply chains span dozens to hundreds of independent organizations. But the systems these organizations use — ERP, EDI, spreadsheets — stop at the boundary of each company's four walls.
The result: manufacturers can't see their suppliers' suppliers. Brands can't see distributor inventory across competing product lines. Demand signals reach raw material suppliers weeks late, distorted by every intermediate system's assumptions.
Blockchain tried to solve this. It didn't. TradeLens shut down. IBM Food Trust stalled. Hyperledger Fabric hits a ceiling at roughly 150 peers. The technology was designed for cryptocurrency consensus, not cross-enterprise coordination.
The problem isn't collaboration willingness. It's that no architecture existed to coordinate data across organizational boundaries while preserving each organization's sovereignty over its own data.
Until now.
Quantum Fabric™
A live, deployed platform that assembles cross-enterprise visibility from autonomous entity peers — each with its own database, its own authentication boundary, and its own privacy controls. No shared ledger. No consensus protocol. No single point of failure.
Batches trace from raw material to retail shelf across five independent companies in seconds. Every entity controls exactly what data is shared, with whom, and at what granularity. Privacy isn't a setting — it's enforced by graph traversal. Structurally impossible to circumvent.
Deployed on production infrastructure with autonomous entity peers across multiple supply chains
Demo spans both industries, from raw material to retail
End-to-end batch trace across 5+ organizations
No consensus, no replication, no practical peer limit
Three architectural pillars
Emergent Network
Peers join independently. No central ledger, no consensus protocol. Network topology emerges from real commercial relationships stored in a graph database. Scales to thousands of peers without replication overhead.
Channel Mesh
Each supply chain collaboration operates as an independent channel. A single entity — like a contract manufacturer serving 20 brands — participates in 20 channels simultaneously with independently configurable visibility in each. Complete data isolation between channels.
Precision Permissions
Two-axis privacy model. Horizontal: how far across the network each entity can see (configurable upstream/downstream visibility depth). Vertical: what data fields are visible, at what granularity, per partner. Enforced at the graph level, not the application level.
The regulatory clock is ticking
FSMA Rule 204 requires food companies to maintain detailed traceability records across their supply chains. DSCSA requires end-to-end electronic traceability for prescription drugs. Most of the industry is behind on compliance — and the tools they've tried (blockchain, EDI extensions, spreadsheets) aren't scaling.
Companies that invested in blockchain traceability experienced the limitations firsthand: onboarding friction, consensus overhead, scaling ceilings, and the fundamental tension between transparency and privacy. Quantum Fabric resolves these by design.