CBSE issued an official advisory on April 2, 2026, addressing misconceptions and misleading claims circulating online about QR codes printed on its board exam question papers (for Classes 10 and 12, 2026 exams).
What the Advisory Clarifies
- The QR codes are not web links or hyperlinks that connect to external websites, videos, or content when scanned.
- They serve internal purposes only: authentication of the question paper, tracking, and maintaining examination integrity/security. This acts as a digital identifier to verify genuineness, especially in case of any suspected breach or leak.
- When scanned with standard QR apps or browsers (like Chrome), they simply display plain text — nothing more, and no external connections or redirects occur.
Why the Confusion Arose (Key Misinterpretations)
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Misleading social media posts and viral claims emerged after some students scanned the codes and then manually copied/search the resulting text on Google. Algorithmic search results sometimes linked to unrelated people, memes, images, or content (e.g., references to individuals like “Orry” or even earlier “rickroll” incidents from papers like Class 12 Maths in March 2026).
CBSE has noted that these are coincidental algorithmic suggestions with no connection to the board, the question paper, or any deliberate encoding. The board described some of this as deliberate propaganda aimed at harming its image. Earlier incidents (e.g., a QR code reportedly leading to a rickroll video in one set) were already clarified by CBSE as not compromising paper authenticity or exam security.
Guidance for Stakeholders
CBSE (via Controller of Examinations Dr. Sanyam Bhardwaj) urged:
- Students, parents, educators, and media — Verify all information only through official CBSE channels (cbse.gov.in or the board’s verified communications).
- Avoid sharing unverified claims, screenshots, or speculative interpretations on social media.
- Refrain from amplifying content that could distort facts or undermine exam integrity.