A QR code posted in Strasbourg's university buildings lets any student anonymously report a teacher to a central service β bypassing local management entirely. France's SNALC teachers' union is calling it a dangerous step toward a culture of suspicion and unfounded accusations.
Since spring 2026, the three IUTs (University Institutes of Technology) of the University of Strasbourg β four across the wider Alsace region β have introduced a novel system: a QR code posted on the walls, accessible to all students, enabling completely anonymous reporting of harassment, racism, antisemitism, verbal, physical or sexual violence, or any form of discrimination β sent directly to a centralized university service, without going through the local management of the institution.
On paper, the intention is commendable. In a context where violence and discrimination in higher education are real and often under-reported, giving victims an accessible reporting channel β free from fear of retaliation β seems like a modern response to an old problem. But this is precisely where the trouble starts, according to the Syndicat National des LycΓ©es et CollΓ¨ges (SNALC) β France's national teachers' union for the Strasbourg academy β which published a scathing statement bluntly titled: "The QR code of shame."
The SNALC is not opposed to fighting harassment or discrimination β far from it. What it criticizes is the design of this particular device, which the union argues suffers from several major structural flaws:
"Who can objectively decide where the 'feeling' of being a victim of violence or discrimination begins and ends? How far might a student, driven by personal resentment or bitterness over a bad grade, go in denouncing a teacher based solely on a subjective feeling or a passing frustration?" β Jean-Pierre GavriloviΔ, president of SNALC Strasbourg
The SNALC does not stop at theoretical speculation. The union cites the actual experience of one of its members, who was anonymously accused through this type of procedure. The facts are damning:
The Strasbourg QR code controversy reflects a broader tension running through educational institutions across Europe and beyond: how can we effectively protect victims without sacrificing the fundamental rights of the accused?
| Arguments in favour of the device | SNALC's arguments against |
|---|---|
| Protects victims who fear retaliation | Removes all right of reply for the accused |
| Lowers barriers to reporting, reduces under-declaration | Encourages thoughtless or malicious complaints |
| Centralises reports to better detect repeat offenders | Short-circuits local mediation and direct dialogue |
| Modernises university procedures | Was implemented without transparent consultation of representative bodies |
| Sends a strong signal against the impunity of harassers | Creates a climate of widespread distrust and suspicion |
The Strasbourg affair is a reminder of a fundamental truth about QR codes: the technology is neutral β it is the use that carries values. The same QR code can be a remarkable tool for accessibility and information, or a mechanism for surveillance and denunciation, depending on the architecture of the system it sits within.
| QR code use case | Impact | Risk level |
|---|---|---|
| Contactless payment (Alipay+, barqβ¦) | Smooths commercial transactions | Low |
| Restaurant menu, tourist info | Improves user experience | Low |
| Anonymous reporting with no procedural safeguards | Risk of abuse and injustice | High |
| Phishing / fraud QR code | Theft of personal and financial data | Critical |
| Hidden biometric data collection | Privacy violation | Critical |
The SNALC is not calling for impunity for harassers or the suppression of legitimate complaints. It is asking that reporting procedures be designed to protect genuine victims without sacrificing the rights of the innocent. Several approaches exist:
"The desire to protect must never justify abandoning human dialogue, listening, transparency, and mutual respect. Allowing total anonymity to become the norm risks turning the university into a place where fear, distrust, and infantilisation replace rigour, maturity, and learning to live together." β SNALC Strasbourg, May 2026
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Scan a QR code βThe "QR code of shame" at the University of Strasbourg is a textbook case β in the most literal sense β of the dangers of deploying technology without sufficient ethical reflection. The QR code itself is not to blame: it is the architecture of the system, its absolute anonymity, the absence of procedural safeguards, and the lack of prior consultation that are at fault.
The SNALC is right to point out that fighting harassment in higher education is a just and urgent cause. But the tools chosen to pursue it must match the values that the university is supposed to embody: rigour, fairness, dialogue, presumption of innocence. A QR code that short-circuits these values is not progress. It is regression dressed up as modernity.
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