Bring Video to your Print Successfully
A QR code is a two-dimensional barcode that creates automatic links to multi-media and text-files like websites. To assess the information, one scans the QR codes using a smartphone camera. The QR codes have enabled authors, publishers and businesses to make the printed material become more attractive. The Quick Response codes allow one to transform a lifeless paper into an exciting sensory material. The Anti-QR codes came up in a bid to fight piracy. The QR codes were seen as a threat to the music and movie industry as they promoted piracy.
Brands that placed QR codes on the products to prove their validity and originality claimed that the codes are open-sourced. That made the names readily available to anyone as the counterfeiters could copy the pages quickly after copying the codes. The QR codes are beneficial only to brands that would like to make their products readily available like pharmaceuticals, beauty companies and nutritional firms. The consumers’ can then scan the codes to confirm if the selected products are genuine. The QR codes can however be secured by creating a complex backend server to secure the system. Secondly, the codes can be placed inside the product where they are unreachable. The counterfeiters will therefore find it hard to interfere with the codes.
Most anti-QR organizations claim that the QR codes have encouraged people to use their phones to unlock images and the real world for an instantaneous static action. The firms also state that the word QR in itself is ugly and nerdy, not suitable enough for a tech world and dampens consumer interest. The anti-bring video to your print aims for a more interactive way of dealing with clients. QR codes are believed to be dying since they are a one-dimensional web link and are not a patented product hence prone to misuse by consumers.