QRix is a secure digital ticketing and digital key app from Israel. It is not positioned as a traditional firewall, EDR, or vulnerability management tool, but rather as a βsecure credential walletβ for concerts, venues, workplaces, and access-permit scenarios. Users can store e-tickets, digital keys, access permits, and green passes in the Android or iOS app, and use them for entry verification when needed.
In terms of protection, QRix focuses on ticket authenticity, preventing screenshot abuse, and reducing transfer fraud. The source text clearly states that screenshot-based tickets will be recognized by entrance control as not being genuine in-app tickets and therefore cannot be used for entry. Tickets can only be transferred from one QRix user to another according to defined rules. The transfer process includes a recipient verification code; if the email address or phone number is entered incorrectly, the transfer can be canceled before verification is completed, and it will be automatically canceled if not completed within 72 hours. If a phone is lost or stolen, users can remotely disconnect the original device via another device or the QRix website, reducing the risk of credential misuse.
Deployment is primarily through a mobile app, with support for Android and iOS. After tickets are delivered via push, they are securely stored locally, so they remain accessible even without a network connection. This is practical for large events or entrances where connectivity may be unstable. On privacy, the source text says registration does not require an ID card by default, except in certain access-permit scenarios where ID may be required. It also does not require a credit card, Bluetooth, or GPS permissions. However, public information does not disclose details such as encryption algorithms, key management, audit logs, an admin console, alerting reports, APIs, or SDKs for enterprise integration. The only confirmed point is that it can work with organizations and venues that use QRix entrance control.
Pricing is not disclosed. The source text only states that users do not need to enter credit card information to use the app, so it is not possible to assess enterprise procurement costs or whether pricing is per ticket, per venue, or based on another model. QRix is better suited to e-ticketing, live events, venue access control, corporate passes, and scenarios where reducing secondary-market ticket fraud is important. For ordinary individual users, its advantage is centralizing tickets and reducing the hassle of searching through emails or printing tickets.
Its strengths are its focused use case, offline availability, verified transfer process, and relatively limited privacy permission requirements. Its drawbacks are limited transparency around security and compliance, dependence on the QRix ecosystem, and a lack of public enterprise integration and pricing information. The source text does not mention access from mainland China or app store availability; network access, payment, and localization support are all unknown. Domestic alternatives in China may include e-tickets from local ticketing platforms, venue-owned access control systems, or general-purpose wallet solutions such as Apple Wallet and Google Wallet.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on qrix.net official site.
qrix.net is an Israel Cybersecurity provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach qrix.net directly.