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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Asian Indian Americans are making sure we get from point A to point me when I drop my DD at her playdate with Google maps provided by Google CEO, who is Indian. I run my family as a technical support analyst due to Microsoft software, provided by Microsoft CEO, who is Indian, etc. Most of our America runs on technologies that are either managed or created by American Indians. [/quote] Okay? Not seeing any relationship to anything on this thread here…[/quote] Welp, a lot of people here seem to be implying that indian americans are dishonest and the only reason they were so over-represented is because they cheat and buy test answers. The poster you are responding to is saying that if that were true, then how would we explain all the contributions of indian american to the technological revolution we are going through. [/quote] Nope, people are not talking about Indian Americans as a group. They are talking about specific posters who appear to be making excuses for adults who may have convinced tweens/young teens to violate the terms of a NDA that the young people signed. They may have convinced young people to reveal copyrighted information that they had only been allowed to access because they agreed to not reveal the information to any outsider. The people making excuses and rationalizations appear to be admitting that these things happened and they are explaining why there’s nothing wrong with it in their minds. Sure, children sometimes lie and/cheat, but generally adults aren’t telling them that it’s perfectly fine to do so. Any adult who does that is very lacking in character and integrity. [/quote] While it has been posted that kids said they saw questions and answers at Curie, and some terms of service for Quant Q clients, it has not been established that kids signed an NDA. And if they did, how? Did the proctors explain this, or is this like the user license agreements and waivers that people don't read? [/quote] 3. QUANT-Q DOESN’T RELEASE MATERIALS [b]The company that offers Quant-Q intentionally does NOT release materials to the public - it’s very different than SAT, ACT, etc. They want to “measure your natural ability”. And test takers agreed to not share any parts of the test. [/b] https://www.washingtonian.com/2017/04/26/is-the-no-1-high-school-in-america-thomas-jefferson-fairfax-discrimination/ [i]“The firm that markets the math portion of the test, [u]Quant-Q, doesn’t release materials to the public, a practice that should make them harder for test-prep schools to crack.[/u]”[/i] Based on the NDAs, any test prep books or companies that obtain and share example quant-q test questions may have been unethically, or even potentially illegally, produced. https://insightassessment.com/policies/ [i]“Test Taker Interface User Agreement In this agreement, each person who accesses this interface is called a “user,” and whatever a user accesses is called an “instrument.” Copyright Protected: The user acknowledges that this online interface and everything in it are proprietary business property of the California Academic Press LLC and are protected by international copyrights. Except as permitted by purchased use licenses, [u]the user agrees not to reproduce, distribute, hack, harm, limit, alter, or edit this interface or any part of any instrument [/u]or results report, table or analysis stored in, generated by, or delivered through this interface. Non-Disclosure and Non-Compete Agreement: [u]The user agrees not to copy, disclose, describe, imitate, replicate, or mirror this interface or this instrument(s) in whole or in part for any purpose.[/u] The user agrees not to create, design, develop, publish, market, or distribute any comparable or competitive instrument or instruments for a period of up to four years from the date of the user’s most recent access.[/i] [/quote]
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