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NovaVision urges layered tamper-evidence to curb cargo theft

May. 5, 2026
NovaVision urges layered tamper-evidence to curb cargo theft

By AI, Created 11:14 AM UTC, May 20, 2026, /AGP/ – NovaVision is warning shippers that plain packaging can help sophisticated thieves hide theft, reseal shipments, and delay detection. The company is pushing tamper-evident labels and seals as a way to expose breaches faster and reduce supply chain losses.

Why it matters: - Cargo theft, tampering, and counterfeiting remain major supply chain risks. - A recent Fortune article cited American Transportation Research Institute data showing cargo theft costs the industry as much as $6.6 billion a year, or more than $18 million every day. - NovaVision says suppliers need layered security because thieves increasingly rely on deception, not just force. - Tamper evidence can help shippers spot breaches quickly and limit losses that may go undiscovered for weeks.

What happened: - NovaVision published security guidance on May 5, 2026, arguing that plain packaging can make supply chains easier to target. - The company framed its message around what it calls the “Bomber Fallacy” of cargo security, a logic trap where damaged seals may be mistaken as the problem instead of proof that a breach was detected. - NovaVision pointed to the risk of shipments that are cut open, emptied, and resealed without obvious signs of tampering. - The company also directed readers to the full report.

The details: - Standard clear packing tape can help a sophisticated thief hide evidence of a break-in. - High-visibility tamper-evident tape can delaminate and leave behind a visible “VOID” or “OPENED” message after an attempt to reseal a package. - An ISO 17712 bolt seal offers resistance and a unique serial number for standard transit. - A heavy-duty barrier seal provides extra physical deterrence and visual proof of integrity for extremely high-value cargo. - NovaVision says organized criminals often use compromised digital manifests, shipping labels, and insider information to identify cargo before theft. - NovaVision describes its offerings as professional-grade tamper evidence designed to expose breaches immediately. - NovaVision, LLC says it provides durability, security, and authenticity labeling solutions and a broader suite of anti-counterfeiting and authenticity technologies. - The company says its work began with product authentication and supply chain integrity.

Between the lines: - The guidance reflects a shift from treating security as a lock to treating it as a detection system. - NovaVision is arguing that the most valuable defense is not making theft impossible, but making theft obvious fast enough to reduce downstream damage. - The company’s emphasis on visual evidence suggests shippers may need security tools that fit both transit risk and fraud-detection workflows.

What’s next: - NovaVision is asking shippers and suppliers to harden shipments so they become the most difficult, high-evidence targets in the supply chain. - The company is offering a free sample through NovaVisioninc.com. - NovaVision is also promoting its solutions through its social channels, including its LinkedIn page.

The bottom line: - NovaVision’s message is simple: if thieves can open, steal, and reseal without detection, packaging failed even if it looked secure.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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