this post was submitted on 12 Sep 2023
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School apps and testing software has tons of DRM. And for good reason. That's the problem.
There is never a good reason for DRM.
Of course there is. In this particular case it prevents cheating.
lol
dude as a student in school I don't think there is anything that supposed drm is gonna stop
writes answers on hand using UV ink
@ShittyRedditWasBetter @Malfeasant
How does it prevent cheating exactly? I can just fire up a windows VM and it won't know that I am looking stuff up even when proctoring I'd assume.
I've been fortunate to not have to deal with Pearson, so I am not talking from experience.
What good reason would an educational resource get to have tons of DRM?
Prevent cheating.
I doubt you know what DRM is...
How does DRM(Digital Rights Management) that has as function the blocking of copying or "blocking non legitimate access" of copyrighted media prevent cheating?
Because that is far different as things like access to tests answers, because that is not the same than copyright.