Listen, every phone or video card of yours is actually a whole world tour across a bunch of countries. And no one really knows how much CO₂ has flown into the atmosphere while this chip made its way to your hands. Right now, companies just pull some number out of thin air and write in their nice reports "we are eco-friendly". And honestly, that really annoys me.
I think that Vanar could become the first normal, honest "green passport" for all electronics. Imagine that every stage, from mining lithium from the ground to the last soldering on the conveyor, is recorded in the blockchain as a microscopic transaction. The fees are trivial, so why not record the entire history of each transistor?
It would probably be real, unbreakable proof, not just another presentation with pretty slides. While everyone is arguing about the price of the token, Vanar could become the tool that big tech giants will soon find indispensable because they will need to show the world true ecology, not just paint it in PowerPoint.
So why is almost no one talking about this? I believe there is already a ready key to the electronics of the future.@Vanarchain #vanar $VANRY
