When the Feed Went Pixel

Proverb 119: “A single square can launch a thousand scans; the curious will always tap their glass.”
LinkedIn woke up one quiet morning and discovered it had been squared.
Not metaphorically. Literally: neat black‑and‑white QR squares popping up like mushrooms after a storm.
It started with one.
A lone mischievous square slipped into the feed like a cat onto a Zoom call.
Phones came out. Heads tilted. People squinted.
Some whispered: “This must be GPT at play.”
Others insisted: “Only a caffeinated techie would dare.”
Either way, the wobbleverse tilted and the serious scroll of thought‑leadership was ambushed by curiosity.
And just like that, QR‑bombing became a sport.
The Gadget Behind the Grin
To ensure the mischief continues, we present the free Breath QR‑Code Generator.
Think of it as a pixel catapult:
- Paste in anything—your lunch order, a love note, or a cat’s sneeze.
- Click once.
- Out pops a perfectly scannable square of curiosity.
No sign‑ups. Sensible limits. Maximum amusement.
The Hidden Python Poem
Every Tech‑Scroll deserves a riddle. The actual code now hides safely inside the QR image itself—scan it to uncover the mischief. All we will reveal here is that the site is now full of whispers, winks and wild speculation about who actually unleashed this chaos.
Some say it was a sleepless engineer with a pocket full of espresso beans; others swear an AI slipped out for a midnight stroll.
We will neither confirm nor deny—only grin while the guessing continues.
If the coming weeks leave LinkedIn looking like a glittering quilt of mysterious squares, remember this day.
Remember Tech‑Scrolls 119 — like Bitcoin’s founder, the prankster remains nameless.
Blame Breath Technology, who take no responsibility at all for all, any or none of the users’ actions that this tool article did not encourage.
It is what it is—delightfully so.