China is
warning its students to steer clear of fake universities. An information
website has published a list of 30 such institutions following the annual
college entry exam in June. This is the sixth such list in existence.
RT News report continues:
Apparently, faking an
entire educational institution isn’t all that difficult. And authorities say
they’re becoming harder to spot. No less than a dozen provinces and regions –
including Beijing and Shanghai - were mentioned in a list by sdaxue.com,
an education information website, according to Xinhua.
Some 30 fake universities
were mentioned, compounding an already fat list of 400 since 2013.
The latest list comes
courtesy of concerned internet surfers across China who reported the fakes
through emails and social media. This was followed by an investigation,
according to Xia Xue, founder of sdaxue.com, which was founded in 2013.
The institutions are part
of a massive, lucrative market in China, involving criminals tricking
prospective students into sending them tuition fees. This is often done by
impersonating or closely replicating the names and websites of popular colleges
and universities.
However, the scammers
have learned their lesson and are now often using much less prominent institutions
as blueprints for their own university names and websites. For instance, 22 of
the 30 fake colleges on this year’s list sound like existing private
institutions offering the national adult education examination – another path
to a degree in China.
"It is easy to see
through the trick when they fake the names of well-known universities, but it
is more difficult to identify if lesser-known institutions are faked," Xia
said.
All of this deception is
often accompanied by course and department information and pictures pulled
directly from existing institutions.
The way the scam works is
by sending students payment information slightly earlier than actual schools
normally do. Authorities say it’s a unified criminal effort, as the IP address
is the same every time, leading the police to Hong Kong.
But it could be said that
since the appearance of sdaxue.com, things have been better for the students at
risk. Apparently there have been students who would spend years actually
studying at dummy colleges, and often finding out only at graduation that they
just threw away several years of their lives.
Although a number of
students are exploiting the fake educational institutions. Havein trouble with
the notoriously difficult Chinese version of the school-leaving exam, they
often actively seek out dummy schools to get an easy pass.
Chinese educational
authorities are working with police to bring the fraudsters to justice before
China’s approximately nine million prospective students file their applications
this year.
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