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Thorsten S.
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How to cope with complaints from tutors who want to fight cheaters?

Interesting answer: One tutor complains here (the answer is deleted now)

How to solve exception in thread "main", java.lang.ArithmeticException: / by zero?

This post contains solution code to one or more of our homework assignments here at University of Washington. It is indexed by Google, which enables students that are currently taking our class to find it and cheat on their assignments.

I don't have enough reputation to report abuse, and I don't know what SO's policy on removing longstanding posts is. It would be great to get this removed, but if not...

As a word of warning to any UW students who have come across this while trying to complete your homework: Posting your code online, viewing any other students code in any form, and (absolutely) using any code you found online in completing your solution is against the course policy.

I know it's tempting, but you know better than that. Delete any code you found online, take another late day, and go to the IPL tomorrow. You may lose a couple points, but you keep your integrity. You are going to do the right thing; I have faith in you.

If that doesn't convince you...make sure you are informed:

If you get caught, it is highly likely you will lose all the points on the assignment, and may face repercussions from the University. I know about this solution, and I have programmatic systems that leverage online solutions like these to find misconduct. You think you can get around it by changing comments or variables, or rearranging blocks of code, but you can't. I care about the academic integrity of our program; finding misconduct is my full time job. (Not for other schools. Just UW. Just CSE. Just 142, 143, and 143x). If you are going to cheat, it's pretty much you versus me.

Go to the course website, look up resources like lecture slides, videos, tutorials, sample programs, section handouts, PracticeIt, and then do your own work.

My name is Whitaker Brand; more information about our courses can be found here: [website redacted]

that the evil doers who are using the answers to cheat will be punished. Well, it does definitely not belong on an answer, but...where exactly does it belong and how to handle this ?

Should we on principle ignore and remove similar warnings ?
Should we move it to a non-deletable comment ?
Should we introduce a "cheat" warning detecting questions like that used in curriculums ?

What should we do ? Sorry if I screwed up, I did not find a duplicate.

Thorsten S.
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