[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":4},["ShallowReactive",2],{"raw-en-articles\u002Ffood-beverage-ontology-for-sourcing-quality-safety-and-consumer-trust":3},"---\ntitle: Food & beverage ontology for sourcing, quality, safety, and consumer trust\ndescription: Structured ontology semantics for sourcing, quality, safety, and consumer trust\nlang: en\nnavigation:\n  enabled: false\n  section: articles\n  order: 30\ntags:\n  - consumer\n  - ontology\n  - quality\n  - safety\n---\nCorporate governance fails not at policy level but translation level—teams locally reinterpret.\n\n## Why this matters\n\nWhen everyone means the same thing by \"critical,\" risk prioritization becomes objective.\n\n## What this looks like in practice\n\n- Governance policies translate directly into control code without ambiguous translation.\n- Risk assessments from different teams are comparable using identical definitions.\n- Escalation decisions are consistent because escalation criteria are uniformly defined.\n\n## How teams use it\n\n- implementing portfolio-level policy consistently across autonomous teams\n- comparing risk across domains using identical metrics\n- auditing governance decisions systematically instead of narrative review\n\nWhen governance semantics are consistent, oversight shifts from manual review to automation.\n",1776235586552]