<p>It does, just it isn't as strictly enforced.</p>
<p>I think that post is a fake. There is no evidence to support it. And from what I know well that CB does not enforce minor violations of their rules. If you run out with an AP exam booklet, scan it, and start selling it online, then you have a problem.</p>
<p>If ETS wanted to stop distributing of their Multiple Choice, one could legally counter with anti-trust suits. They cannot legally trace it back to you without government approval of some kind and they cannot prove it was a specific person who leaked the answers, ESPECIALLY IN A MATH OR SCIENCE TEST WHERE THERE ARE NO EXACT WORDS.</p>
<p>You can broadcast fake IPs quite easily. At least you could when I was hacking(legally!)</p>
<p>The vast majority of private isp's will not give out the names of the people attached to a certain IP address. People like me who are on dial-up have different IP addresses whenever we log on, so I am pretty much bullet proof. The only people they can easily catch are the kids on campus networks. That goes for pirating music too.</p>
<p>And just use HideIP Platinum to give an IP address in China/a hostile country that doesn't recognize US authority.</p>
<p>
[quote]
College Board isn't taking you to court. Since they're a private organization (Or business, haha) they have every right to cancel the score.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Are the College Board's cancellation rights delineated when you register for, or appear at, a given testing session? When they "cancel" the results does that mean for the given session or the entire record including past scores?</p>
<p>I think banning college-confidential ppl from taking AP Tests again is enough to scare us to do anything O_o</p>
<p>interesting</p>
<p>ap scores are not that big of a thing..if you have a 1800 10 5's wont do you any good</p>
<p>trinity, I think, is the same as tri_n .</p>
<p>what are the odds?</p>
<p>Zero would be a good guess.</p>
<p>I didn't know they could just lock it like that. I know that sounds dumb, but it would be a good solution.</p>
<p>Yay, 1st post in 2008!</p>
<p>Btw, is it 'illega' to 'trade' released AP Exams? I mean, Collegeboard can't possibly expect that normal people can buy every released AP exam they want to take...</p>
<p>umm... me and my friends definitely went out to lunch after the AP World test last year and whined about the questions at each other. Do you know if the ETC bugs sushi?</p>
<p>snarkiness aside, it's really not that hard to control youself for two days. I'd just say put up with the ETC's arbitrary anal-retentive-ness and save your score. </p>
<p>Thanks for the warning, Tri_N! I have a whole new level of respect for the ETC. Do they have ninjas too? :)</p>
<p>How the hell do you manage to get caught on an online forum?</p>
<p>Collegeboard has their spies...
They're everywhere</p>
<p>im pretty sure it would take a federal subpoena to get your isp to release your ip address. Since the legal agreement you make with ETS not to share results is governed only by contract law, and civil matters at that, it is impossible to assume ets lawyers could secure the information. therefore i HIGHLy doubt ETS actually positively identified a person from a message board post.</p>
<p>It's an honor system thing. Remember many of the kids signing these "contracts" are minors and their signature is worthless.</p>
<p>this is the collegeboard we're talking about guys, not the CIA...</p>
<p>I'm not saying I would ever do it, but people could use a proxy, which hides their IP Adresses.....</p>
<p>when are we allowed to talk about the ap questions? isnt it like 48 hours after the test is administered?</p>
<p>I think that's for FRQ's. We're technically NEVER supposed to discuss the MC sections.</p>