Securikett Launches Structured Silicone Coating Anti-Counterfeiting Label
2026-04-11 15:21
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en.Wedoany.com Reported - Austrian security label supplier Securikett recently announced its latest security label manufacturing technology. This technology utilizes a structured silicone coating process to integrate complex structures such as viewing windows, technical openings, and ventilation holes within the label. By precisely die-cutting and separating specific areas during the material production stage, this solution enhances anti-counterfeiting difficulty while maintaining compatibility with standard labeling processes.Securikett

The core of this technology lies in the special coating treatment during the label material manufacturing process. During production, the system can precisely die-cut defined areas from the label and retain them on the liner paper, allowing the actual label to form functional product windows or micro-openings. Since these precise structures are already formed during the substrate manufacturing stage, counterfeiters find it difficult to replicate them through post-processing. According to publicly available information, Securikett has deep technical expertise in anti-counterfeiting and tamper-evident fields, and this new process further strengthens the physical anti-counterfeiting level of the label.

Regarding industry collaborative verification, Polytag, Saica Flex, and Paragon Inks have reached a cooperation, successfully printing invisible ultraviolet (UV) identifiers on packaging labels. This system, paired with Polytag's detection equipment, can capture item-level data in real-time when packaging enters the recycling stream to meet increasingly stringent environmental regulations and recycling reporting requirements.

Meanwhile, retail giant Marks & Spencer recently upgraded its food packaging labels for greater transparency. In response to previous accusations from the Real Bread Campaign regarding incomplete disclosure of product ingredients, Marks & Spencer now displays a simplified yet complete ingredient list on the front of its packaging. Previous data showed that some of its bread products actually contained 13 ingredients, far exceeding the 4 ingredients declared on the original label. This adjustment aims to address market concerns about the transparency of ultra-processed foods through more detailed ingredient labeling.

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