I really really hate QR codes.
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@sundogplanets For things like text & URLs duckduckgo can create QR codes by searching for "qr code <text/URL>"
@paddi @sundogplanets holly crap that's so useful, I didn't know that and I've been using the duck as my default for years now
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets Here are three unencumbered (and open source) tools that I regularly use:
Web-based one, provided by @Framasoft :
https://omnitools.framatoolbox.org/image-generic/qr-codeAndroid application:
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/com.atharok.barcodescanner/Linux command line (available in most distros packages directly):
https://github.com/fukuchi/libqrencode -
I see, your problem is already solved, but I find the command line tool 'qrencode' (in all major repositories) the easiest one:
qrencode -o qr.png 'https://berlin.social/@mina' yields to
BTW: I also had a question today, and it was also instantly solved by my bubble.
This is, what the internet was supposed to be. Lovely people helping each other.
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets mr-qr.com has many options and so far just have me out what i put in

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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets I've used the qrencode tool to make qr codes. It's available for Linux and Mac (via homebrew).
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets https://github.com/revk/QR is quite versatile
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets LibreOffice has one built in too.
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@hallvors AMAZING
@sundogplanets @hallvors and to verify it didn't tamper with the URL:
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@sundogplanets LibreOffice has one built in too.
I was going to mention this too.
And as a bonus. Using LibreOffice means you can avoid Microsoft Copilot 365 app
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets there is also an easy qr code generator as an add-on to mozilla firefox

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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets
The main problem I have with QR codes is how opaque they are. For any given code:
-Who generated it and is it therefore trustworthy (tw).
-What other sites does the code transit while in use? The generator could be tw but are the cdns used equally tw?
-Is malware, phishing, or data harvesting injected along the transit chain?
-How do you *really* know where your browser is going before you use the qr code?
For me using a qr code in general is asking for id theft. -
I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
There are plenty of good QR code generators. I use
https://www.qr-code-generator.com/But you are right to be wary - especially when reading QR codes. Make sure that your QR code reader is one that lets you look at the URL first, not one that just loads up automatically. Then you can see that the website being loaded is the one that you are expecting. People have been known to paste fake QR codes over real ones in public places, for example.
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@sundogplanets
The main problem I have with QR codes is how opaque they are. For any given code:
-Who generated it and is it therefore trustworthy (tw).
-What other sites does the code transit while in use? The generator could be tw but are the cdns used equally tw?
-Is malware, phishing, or data harvesting injected along the transit chain?
-How do you *really* know where your browser is going before you use the qr code?
For me using a qr code in general is asking for id theft.@mildpeach @sundogplanets I feel like the second point onwards could very well be true for any URL you encounter in the wild.
A good QR scanner app will display what it read and lets you choose what to do with that information.
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@sundogplanets For things like text & URLs duckduckgo can create QR codes by searching for "qr code <text/URL>"
@paddi @sundogplanets that’s wild.
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
Thank you! I am sad to have missed helping you. (I learned several new options from everyone for when I am in a pinch like you were!)
An option for the list here, a reader-generator combo:
QR Scanner (Privacy Friendly Apps) by the Security Usability and Society research group at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
This is one that pauses to show you the link. It works well paired with the URLCheck app as the default web application.
https://f-droid.org/packages/com.secuso.privacyFriendlyCodeScanner
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@mildpeach @sundogplanets I feel like the second point onwards could very well be true for any URL you encounter in the wild.
A good QR scanner app will display what it read and lets you choose what to do with that information.
@phl @mildpeach @sundogplanets yea, just turn off "open immediately" or whatever your setting is
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
Here is one you can embed an image into by @andrewt
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
-
I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets if you are one of those astronomy folks who dabbles in using python on the side, to plot data or ephemeris position stuffs... there are a few libraries for python one can use to create QR codes. No online interaction needed, except to install the library.
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I really really hate QR codes. But a lot of people really like them. And they're useful during a talk for the people who really like them (I'm also including the text of the link, though, dammit!)
But... I have never done this before, and a lot of the "free QR code generators" look kind of scammy and I don't want to give people weird viruses or spam. So... fediverse, help!
EDIT TO ADD SOLUTION: within like 2 minutes https://zxing.appspot.com/generator
I love you, fediverse.
@sundogplanets
https://gchq.github.io/CyberChef/
1. Choose 'Other' on the left.
2. Click "Generate QR Code" and drag it into the "Recipe" box in the middle.
3. Adjust settings if desired.
4. Paste or type your text into the "Input" field on the top right.
That's it. You can even download the page and run it offline since it's all in your browser.
Also, LibreOffice can do it: https://help.libreoffice.org/latest/en-US/text/shared/01/qrcode.html