학술논문

University 'Pay-For-Grades': The Bait and Switch Search Engine Optimization Strategies of Contract Cheating Websites in The United States
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Timothy M. Daly (ORCID 0000-0002-4947-0789); James C. Ryan
Source
International Journal for Educational Integrity. 2024 20.
Subject
Search Engines
Contracts
Cheating
Web Sites
Student Recruitment
Marketing
Online Searching
Deception
Higher Education
Integrity
Plagiarism
Language
English
ISSN
1833-2595
Abstract
This paper presents the first systematic investigation into the search engine optimization practices of major contract cheating websites in the United States. From a business perspective, visibility in organic search engine results is considered one of the top client recruitment tools. The current understanding of student recruitment strategies by these companies remains largely unexplored in both academic literature and popular press. Replicating the business research practices used in the search engine optimization industry, comprehensive search engine ranking and traffic data was obtained for the 38 largest contract cheating websites in the US. The overall objective was to illuminate the strategies that these companies take to get their services at the top of the search results of as many students as possible -- not just the relatively small proportion of students actively cheating. The results show that these companies dominate the search results for not just students searching to cheat, but also for naïve search efforts, when students are simply doing genuine research or classwork. These nefarious companies use highly sophisticated search engine manipulation strategies to bait naïve student searchers onto their sites, thus enabling the potential to switch them to cheaters. Higher education institutions, armed with the specific details provided in this study, can use the strategies outlined in the discussion to directly and negatively impact on the success of these contract cheating services.