QR Code Degenerators: Unmasking a Crypto Scam

  • Given how ubiquitous QR Codes are these days (I received a letter from my county to pay my property tax via QR code!), it's mind-boggling to me why Google and Apple don't simply add add native QR scanning to Android and iOS. Why force us to navigate the minefield of third-party apps for something so easily done in-house?

  • I have a qr generator website that has been active for 10 years or more, during the last few years I have had random emails asking me to sell it. I've decline because I don't want to lose the domain, maybe some of these buyers are motivated by this, not plastering it with AdSense which I always thought.

  • Plenty of QR code generators, and QR code readers, aren't associated directly with cryptocurrency. It's not hard to create and verify a QR code using software that isn't associated with bitcoin, and so doesn't have a target painted on it for cybercreeps.

  • That's for that kind of things I don't trust Google anymore.

    Personnal experience : my landowner wanted me to buy a pair of MBT shoes and found a site named mbtsolde.com (equivalent in english to mbtsales) which offered mbt shoes at high discount. Upon payment, the site proposed no paypal or the usual gateways present on french/belgian e-commerce but instead only traditional credit card (mastercard and the like).

    I signified to my land owner I didn't trust the site, adding paypal was a good indication about the trust you could grant to an e-commerce. After further searching, I discovered MBT shoes were subject to scams by chinese companies impersonnating specialised MBT stores and that the issues was nearly ten years old.

    For privacy concern I don't use (or rarely) google anymore directly and use instead searx, a open source metasearch engine providing anonymized results of a hundred classic and specialized search engine, like yandex, yahoo, bing, qwant, faroo, google, but also torrent site search engine, wikipedia and other specialised sites...

    It took me again 2 other searches with words like "fake mbt shoes" and "how to recognize fake mbt ?" to finally find the real official MBT site and its european shop on a subdomain, on a YANDEX search result. The site even inform the visitor it put in place a certification to recognize authentic shoes and get informed of the official local dealer where to buy mbt shoes. On the Google side, most search result were either scam sites, scam blog posts advertizing scam sites pretending to inform visitor about fake MBT shoes and amazon search results about MBT shoes (which has an endemic counterfeit products issue).

  • I saw a Shark Tank episode where Chris Sacca described QR codes as the herpes of the Internet. I don't have the same sense of loathing for it that he does, but that phrase stuck in my mind.

    I guess most of the alternatives are just as insecure and annoying, or worse. NFC isn't really any better, for instance. Logins and touchscreens are no fun, either.

  • Hello Everyone. Thanks to whoever posted this. Please post questions about this. We were happy to share it with the community

    Ouriel Ohayon CEO, ZenGo

  • How many wallets are scams on github/app store? That’s the real question