<p>hahaha i was always embarrassed to do this cause i thought it would be a live person. And if I got like a 1 on one of m exams she would make fun of me or something. Maybe i'll do it this year since I'm going to need to organize my college schedule around the APs</p>
<p>the bot makes fun of you,actually.</p>
<p>While I do not condone this, it is actually possible use a non-real credit card due to a flaw in the automated system. All one needs to do is goolge: "credit card number generator" and use that generated number to tell the automated system. For the expiration date, any random date will do.</p>
<p>Because the automated system doesn't attempt to make an authorization charge at that moment, it just bases that if the number you entered fits the algorithim for a credit card, then it is okay. Generating a random number will most likely result in a card not valid so when the system does actually attempt to bill, it will not be able to but you will have your scores already.</p>
<p>This is probably illegal, but I know it works ;)</p>
<p>and if it results in a card that IS valid</p>
<p>you've just committed fraud...fun :)</p>
<p>
[quote]
not-for-profit monopolistic corporation such as the College Board
[/quote]
</p>
<p>College Board ain't not-for-profit. CollegeBoard dot COM means it's not. I would say faking a credit card number is a pretty stupid thing to do. It's not worth the risk for you to lose everything you have worked so hard for to save $8 (no matter how much you hate the College Board-- and I don't blame you for hating them!). Either cough up the $8 or wait a couple of more weeks. Don't break the law for this one.</p>
<p>@RChris173: lol...thanks for that tip :)</p>
<p>"Yeah somewhere around that time. Definitely before the 30th, though."</p>
<p>For mailed results?</p>
<p>awesome</p>
<p>no for when you can call.</p>