
"Made O'Meter allows users to scan everyday products from cotton swabs to cereal boxes and uses AI to identify whether the product is linked to a U.S. company. If the product is tied to the U.S., the app will tell you more details about the company that produced it and where it was manufactured. It will also suggest alternative products with no U.S. link."
"[Danish citizens] love the American people, but we don't like the way that the government is treating Europe and Denmark, and especially not when they're threatening on stealing Greenland,"
"seeking immediate negotiations to once again discuss the acquisition of Greenland by the United States."
Donald Trump's revived idea of acquiring Greenland triggered a strong Danish reaction and sharply increased interest in the Made O'Meter app. The app saw an estimated 11,000 downloads across iOS and Android in January, joining Denmark's most downloaded lists amid roughly 200,000 daily iOS downloads. Programmer Ian Rosenfeldt reported roughly 20,000 photo uploads to the browser version and similar mobile upload numbers during the surge. Made O'Meter uses AI to scan product labels, identify U.S. company links, provide company and manufacturing details, and suggest non-U.S. alternatives. Trump said he would not use military force but sought negotiations on Greenland.
Read at Fortune
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