OpenFoodFacts (https://world.openfoodfacts.org/) is probably the largest database of food worldwide and helps millions of people make purchasing decisions every day through hundreds of apps and online services. With the help of a practical app, you can scan the barcodes of over 3 million products to find out, for example, nutritional values, dietary compatibility and carbon footprint. OpenFoodFacts and associated apps can also make purchase recommendations if, for example, a scanned product does not meet the desired ideal sugar values, but an alternative product does. All data is collected by volunteers, without any profit motive. Many Migros products are currently already included in the database, but unfortunately not always with the correct nutritional values or complete content information. However, OpenFoodFacts enables food producers to easily import their product information and thus correct incorrect data and become more visible on the platform (https://world.pro.openfoodfacts.org/). For Migros, this would be a good opportunity to display the full range with correct values in one of the world's most important food databases, to support customers in their purchasing decisions and to appear more often in the suggestions as a comparable alternative product. This would also be an easy way to support open data with a broad impact. In my opinion, Migros should take advantage of this opportunity and contribute its own products to OpenFoodFacts. The effort involved should be limited, OFF supports many common standards for internal product data systems and is certainly very willing to support Migros with the import.