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...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Sunday: January 9, 2005



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Microsoft Expels MCPs, Comes Down on Web Sites for NDA Violations


10/25/2000 -- Microsoft said recently that it has expelled a number of MCPs from its certification program as a result of its recently updated anti-cheating and exam non-disclosure policy. The latest iteration, made public in June (go to www.microsoft.com/trainingandservices and click on Certification, then on the news item “Microsoft Enforces Exam Security Policy”) threatens anybody caught cheating on an exam with immediate loss of any current certifications the candidate holds and permanent ineligibility for any Microsoft Certified Professional certification. Examples of violations include using notes brought into the testing center, copying test questions, and looking at the monitors of other test takers.

Microsoft is also hitting hard on Web sites suspected of publishing exam material. Alice Ciccu, exam development program manager in the MCP program, said the owners of seven sites were recently found to be in violation of the nondisclosure agreement by publishing questions from certification exams.

“We can go after individual posters, but that takes a long time,” said Ciccu. “If I can just get the Web site taken down, all those people [who] posted to it are removed.”

The site owners -- four MCPs in Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, and Texas -- were immediately decertified and are now permanently ineligible for any Microsoft certification.

“All four of those people had violated the nondisclosure agreement,” Ciccu said. “They also violated their MCP program agreement, which said they would not do anything to cause harm to the program or Microsoft, which a braindump site clearly does.”

Ciccu said she believes that most of the Web sites in question have either come down or removed content related to Microsoft exams. She added that a “couple of dozen” individuals will probably become decertified in the month of September for sharing questions or cheating.

The company requests those who know of specific incidents of cheating or exam piracy to provide details to or by calling 800-636-7544. As the policy states, “We will investigate all credible leads.” -- Dian L. Schaffhauser

This article originally appeared in the November 2000 issue of Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine.

What do you think of Microsoft's crackdown on braindumps? Post your comments below or enter our Forums.



There are 54 CertCities.com user Comments for “Microsoft Expels MCPs, Comes Down on Web Sites for NDA Violations”
Page 3 of 6
11/15/00: HEHE! says: I agree with what Larry E. says. hehe!
11/16/00: Ken says: IMHO, I think MicroSoft has done what needed to be done for a long time. Individuals have broken their NDA with MS. What I Don't understand is why they(Microsoft) don't go after sites like CHEATSHEETS & TROYTEC. Those I-NET company's are doing the same thing as the Dump site operators...ONLY THEY'RE ARE PFOFITING FROM IT BIG TIME.
11/17/00: Computer says: I believe in the brain dumps. Sometimes you study a test (Exam Cram) and they have no useful questions which are on the test. For those of us who cant afford the transcender tests, the brain dumps give us a bit more material to study. You still have to know your stuff!
11/27/00: Willard says: I fully agree with Microsoft's crackdown on cheaters. I achieved my MCSE and MCT several years ago, and I'm currently working very hard to upgrade to the Windows 2000 MCSE certification. I take pride in doing the work I do and try to provide the very best instruction I can to the students I teach. It really pains me to see the brain dump sites, knowing that people are using them to try to achieve easy certification without thoroughly knowing the material. It's really not fair to those of us that have paid so much and worked so hard, besides the fact that it decreases the value of certification. I hope that Microsoft's changes in the testing formats helps to discourage cheaters.
11/27/00: ChuckD says: The crackdown is good. However the penalty is too harsh. Violation of the NDA should cancel the current certification, and that is all. Recertification, with no shortcuts is penalty enough. 2nd time offenders yes. No more certification. But once, slap the hands and try it again.
12/4/00: Braindumps says: What amazes me is the incredible amount of information people seem to retain after an exam. I'm referring to the braindumps. They are able to recall, word for word, approx. 40-50 questions from the actual exam...give me a break. It's bogus. Those braindumps suck. I have never got anything out of them. Why doesn't Microsoft go after Transcender...all of the exams I have taken, at least 5 questions were exact duplicates to the real thing. The only thing changed was the persons name, ie. "Sally" became "Susan"...etc.
1/18/01: Anti-Corruption says: Braindumpers who get a job in my IT department are useless! They don't know what they're doing technically and take away vital resources to be shown what they already claim to know; commands such as "ping" and concepts such a "default gateway" or "mapping a drive" are alien to them. If Microsoft doesn't aggressively protect the integrity of their testing procedures, they will be (are) producing phoney experts. These experts will not be able to properly manage a Microsoft Infrastructure and the network will be crap. The blame will go back to Microsoft as being crap and not to the useless support team-members. If Microsoft wants their products to fly, then they must get the proper support for them and tighten up on the security and preserve the integrity of their exams instead just aiming to lower the total cost of ownership. Microsoft and CISCO both have available for "free" from their websites everything you need to get the knowledge you need to pass the exams through user guides, technical white papers, deployment guides, technet, cco, etc. People claiming they can't "afford" a proper means to study and must use braindumps are lying to themselves and to us and are lowering the standards of the IT community. I am an MCSE351 and MCSE4+Internet, I have lost faith in Microsoft certification because of the quality of my peers and have moved towards other avenues. Hopefully a minimum standard will return. KP MCSE+I, CCNP-Security
1/23/01: Anonymous says: for an exam ......study smart not hard
1/25/01: Tim says: As various court cases have shown, Microsoft engaged in ILLEGAL behavior, not just rinky-dink nondisclosure agrrements. SCREW THEM
1/25/01: Al says: Certain testing centers have a habit of looking the other way when people sneak in notes. They are for profit companies. Any person they catch will not come back, and besides, any testing center with a reputation of kicking out their customers will not make as much money.
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