Jul. 22nd, 2008
Вот, наконец, интересная профессия обнаружилась: наемный сдаватель экзаменов. А то, говорят, школа ни к чему полезному не готовит.
WSJ -- Palm-vein scanning on GMAT test takers will begin next month in Korea and India, with U.S. centers starting as early as this fall and a world-wide rollout by May.
The technology targets "proxy" test taking, a fraud in which applicants hire high-scoring imposters to take the exam in their place. Five years ago, federal authorities (кто же еще) broke up a ring of six fraudsters who took more than 590 exams, including GMATs, for customers who paid at least $3,000.
WSJ -- Palm-vein scanning on GMAT test takers will begin next month in Korea and India, with U.S. centers starting as early as this fall and a world-wide rollout by May.
The technology targets "proxy" test taking, a fraud in which applicants hire high-scoring imposters to take the exam in their place. Five years ago, federal authorities (кто же еще) broke up a ring of six fraudsters who took more than 590 exams, including GMATs, for customers who paid at least $3,000.
Вот, наконец, интересная профессия обнаружилась: наемный сдаватель экзаменов. А то, говорят, школа ни к чему полезному не готовит.
WSJ -- Palm-vein scanning on GMAT test takers will begin next month in Korea and India, with U.S. centers starting as early as this fall and a world-wide rollout by May.
The technology targets "proxy" test taking, a fraud in which applicants hire high-scoring imposters to take the exam in their place. Five years ago, federal authorities (кто же еще) broke up a ring of six fraudsters who took more than 590 exams, including GMATs, for customers who paid at least $3,000.
WSJ -- Palm-vein scanning on GMAT test takers will begin next month in Korea and India, with U.S. centers starting as early as this fall and a world-wide rollout by May.
The technology targets "proxy" test taking, a fraud in which applicants hire high-scoring imposters to take the exam in their place. Five years ago, federal authorities (кто же еще) broke up a ring of six fraudsters who took more than 590 exams, including GMATs, for customers who paid at least $3,000.



