The Paper Trail

Users of a Shuttered GMAT Prep Site Could Face Sanctions

June 24, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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A copyright infringement lawsuit, which shuttered a site that improperly distributed GMAT questions, could spell trouble for the more than 1,000 prospective M.B.A. students who used the service, the Chronicle of Higher Education reports. A district court in Virginia awarded the test administrator, the Graduate Management Admission Council, $2.3 million in damages from ScoreTop.com, which offered a sneak peak at "live" test questions and unauthorized study materials to its users.

GMAC, which is now analyzing the site's payment information, posted a message at ScoreTop.com that students who used the site will have their test scores cancelled, be barred from taking the exam again, have their business schools notified, and may be subject to prosecution. "This is illegal," a GMAC spokeswoman told Business Week. "We have a hard drive, and we're going to be analyzing it. If you used the site and paid your $30 to cheat, your scores will be canceled. They're in big trouble."

Business schools say it is too early to tell what their response will be, and because prospective students who are most competitive are the ones who tend to use these services, the fallout will likely be limited to the top schools. And for the students who used the site, which has been in existence since 2003, and are already enrolled in M.B.A. programs? According to one administrator, the punishment could range "from a slap on the wrist to expulsion."

Tags:
graduate schools,
business school,
GMAT

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Who said we are not devising more lethal weapons of mass destruction anymore.

This is the most effective way of killing the a few thousands of best human minds

( but including some masquerading cheats). Hope someone at GMAC can differentiate between spread of bird-flu and inappropriate internet access (inappropriate, but sometimes unintended ). I hope sanity prevails. God save the B Schools from becoming ghettos.

JK 6:31AM July 02, 2008

THe GMAC spokesperson is just another talking head/idiot. She has no idea what she's talking about. First of all, it's hard to say at this point that the students knew that they were getting ACTUAL test questions. Someone can claim that they have actual test questions but i'm not sure anyone would expect the exam secrets for $30. I fI had bought the access ( I've never even taken the GMAT), I would get a good attorney but I would legally go after that spokesperson first for talking out of her clearly overpaid goldbrickin' arse.

Art Cerdarini of WA 3:35AM June 28, 2008

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