Luke Coppen's avatar
Critics see red over French clergy ID card
Pascal's avatar

The issue with QR codes is that the human eye cannot easily tell whether one has been changed from its previous pattern.

I am imagining a situation where, say, a bishop (let's call him Pricka) knows the abuse record of one of his priests. Pricka has enough cash to pay a programmer to build a copycat website, and he knows the priest's confidential code (being his bishop), so he can incorporate that and enter a fake clean record for him. (He doesn't know the code? No problem, make the fake site ac…

Gratian's avatar

Putting aside the gross misuse of diocesan funds to create such a website (which would create a paper trail for the bishop's negligence and a potential leak in the programmer who could go to the press about this), I'm not entirely sure this would be an issue since it would be hosted on an entirely different site. The QR code is, I imagine, an encoded URL leading to some diocesan website. A wrong URL in a browser is easier to snuff out than a different QR code. And even then, the diocese could a…

All good points. This hypothetical (like many scams) does rely on folks not paying close attention, and I think the app idea is a great one. You're right that it'd almost certainly be more trouble than it's worth. It's just that the onetime-cybersecurity-nerd in me quivers at the mention of QR codes and at any possibility for circumvention... I wish I didn't immediately jump to suspicion, but that's where it seems the church is at these days.

May 16, 2023
at
5:35 PM