This event QR code is no longer active.
The code on the badge, lanyard, program, or vendor sign you just scanned was created on GlyphIQ for an event that has since wrapped. The organizer chose to retire the code rather than leave attendees routing to a stale agenda. Nothing went wrong on your end.
Why this happened
Conferences, festivals, expos, and tradeshows have a fixed run. Once the schedule wraps, the lineup, sponsor list, and vendor row all become history. When an organizer retires the event code, GlyphIQ routes scans here instead of into a stale schedule or a hijacked redirect.
QR codes at events
Conference and festival operators print QR codes on every visible surface — attendee badges link to the personalized schedule, lanyards carry the venue map, vendor row signage points at sponsor pages, panel-room placards link to the breakout's slide deck, keynote-stage screens route to the recording afterward, expo booths print codes on handouts so attendees can grab the deck without queuing. Most events print these on physical media weeks before doors open. After the event wraps, every printed badge, lanyard, and program still in circulation is a potential scan. Most QR platforms stop responding the moment a subscription lapses, which strands attendees opening their swag bag months later. GlyphIQ keeps codes recognized after the event ends, so the lanyard you tossed in a drawer still routes somewhere intentional rather than into a 404.
For event organizers
If you run a conference, festival, or expo and want badges, lanyards, and programs that route somewhere clean after the event wraps, GlyphIQ is built for that timeline. Retire the code when the lineup is finalized as history; attendees scanning later land here, not nowhere.