<https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/jul/04/eventually-it-will-just-be-a-barcode-wont-it-why-britains-new-stamps-are-causing-outrage-and-upset>

[...]
In February, Royal Mail introduced a new design for its standard stamps, which 
have changed so little since the launch of the Penny Black in 1840 that they 
are officially known as “definitives”. The new stamps – “plum purple” for first 
class, “holly green” for second – still feature the same regal profile 
introduced more than 50 years ago. But what is most bothering purists – and 
leading Johnson to the brink of direct action – is the addition next to the 
Queen of a digital barcode.

The rectangular codes – which look like QR codes but are apparently not QR 
codes, which are a particular, and trademarked, kind of code – are designed are 
designed to stop counterfeiting and to enable the tracking of all letters to 
improve efficiency. Correspondents will soon be able to share photo or video 
messages by linking digital content to their coded stamps. Recipients will view 
it via the Royal Mail app [...]

From 1 February 2023, only the new stamps will be accepted. Any old stamps must 
be used before then or traded in. Christmas and other themed special stamps 
will remain valid indefinitely. Swapping definitives, which can still be done 
after the deadline, is free but will involve downloading and printing a form, 
or requesting one by phone or letter, and posting it to Royal Mail along with 
the old stamps.

Royal Mail describes the change as a postal “reinvention” that connects stamps 
to the digital world for a new generation. “But the whole point of my society 
was to give us a break from having to be engaged with digital content,” says 
Johnson, 49, from her home in Swanage in Dorset. 
[...]

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