More than 1,000 QR-coded stickers were mysteriously put on gravestones and wooden crosses at three cemeteries in Germany. When scanned, the codes reveal just the name of the deceased buried in the ...
Germany, Wednesday, Nov. 1, 2006. (AP Photo/Christof Stache, File) (Christof Stache, AP2006) BERLIN – Police in Munich are investigating a mystery: More than 1,000 stickers were put on ...
BERLIN, Germany — Police in Munich are investigating a mystery: More than 1,000 stickers were put on gravestones and wooden crosses at three cemeteries in the German city, without any indication ...
Police in Munich are investigating a mystery: More than 1,000 stickers were put on gravestones and wooden crosses at three cemeteries in the German city, without any indication of where they came ...
The stickers have appeared at the Waldfriedhof, Sendlinger Friedhof and Friedhof Solln cemeteries in the southern German city ...
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Why are Germans putting 'Not bad' stickers around the world?a prosperous state in south-western Germany known for its distinct dialect ... to attract more tourists to Baden-Würrtemberg, the stickers have long since taken on a life of their own.
BERLIN, Germany — Police in Munich are investigating a mystery: More than 1,000 stickers were put on gravestones and wooden crosses at three cemeteries in the German city, without any indication ...
More than 1,000 stickers were put on gravestones and wooden crosses at three cemeteries in the southern German city of Munich. The stickers, which have been put on both old and recent graves ...
The 5×3.5-centimeter (1.95×1.2-inch) stickers are printed with a QR code, that, when scanned, shows the name of the person buried in the grave and its location in the cemetery — but nothing else.
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