Japanese police have arrested a boy for cheating on his university entrance examination by using a mobile phone to photograph the questions and get the answers from accomplices on the Internet, in what turned out to be Japan’s biggest news story in months.
The incident began with a 19-year-old Sendai man (or “boy” as the Japanese media calls him) who was taking a year out after graduating from high school to attend prep-school, in the hopes of passing the gruelling entrance examinations for one of Japan’s 4 top universities. He resided at their dormitory.
He decided on a “cunning” scheme (literally – the English word “cunning” in Japanese actually means “cheating”), in which he took a mobile phone into the entrance exams and then mailed photographs of especially difficult questions to an accomplice, who then posted the photo onto the Japanese version of “Yahoo! Answers” and relayed the correct answer back to the student, all in real time as the exam was going on.
By some astonishing happenstance, posting evidence of his cheating on a public website accessible to millions resulted in an investigation, but rather than a report to university authorities or some angry ranting on 2ch, the investigation took the form of a full police manhunt by Japan’s national high-tech crime unit in Kyoto, who demanded logs from Yahoo! and then traced the IPs used back to the cheater.
The mass media soon made the investigation their lead story, and police subsequently resolved to make an example of the young man by charging him with “fraudulent interference with the official duties [of the university]”, and after a short manhunt they succeeded in arresting him.
The man being taken to jail by police amidst a media circus:
As a result of the Yahoo! connection he came to be identified by the Yahoo! username used, “aicezuki,” although his actual identity has not been released. Some 180 questions in total were asked using the account over an extended period of time, covering English and maths, with as many as 8 questions answered this way in a single exam. The man police arrested claims he acted alone.
Graduation from a top university is generally essential to the career prospects of Japanese salarymen, but actual university life is undemanding – the difficult and extremely crucial part is instead the university entrance examinations, which is why so many Japanese children and young adults find themselves herded into cram schools or forced to take a year out to try again for entry.
Thus it is probably no exaggeration to say that with entry to a respectable university now all but impossible and his name tarred with a cheating conviction, the career of this young man is probably over before it began.
Perhaps of more interest than the incredibly petty nature of the offence is the handling of the case by Japan’s mass media, who have been treating it akin to an ongoing murder manhunt for several days, with endless diagrams, expert opinions, and even subtitled announcements of the arrest on unrelated programmes.
Reporters have even been pursuing the suspected cheater’s family, and when the suspect “went missing” for a time after making a distraught apology to his family critics of the reporting were left with the distinct impression he might have been hounded into suicide.
The bizarre fixation on the story by both media and police has already been the subject of extensive criticism, with the media widely accused of manufacturing a national scandal out of an inconsequential trifle, and the police of trampling the independence of academia with their absurd criminal investigation and charges.
Even more strangely, the media and police have been completely silent on the issue of how exam invigilators overlooked a student smuggling a phone into the hall and then extensively using it during the exam itself.
The arrest is now Japan’s top story, proving far more interesting to the mass media than Libyan civil war, New Zealand earthquakes, the ongoing disintegration of the government and Chinese jets buzzing Okinawan airspace – despite the general difficulty in finding any normal person who actually cares about an isolated case of exam cheating.











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Well, at least now he learnt that this kind of cheating is not as fun as the other type of cheating.
Exam is SERIOUS BUSINESS.
Well, considering that cheating on it gets you banned from higher education in Japan; Yes?
Wow...just wow...and I thought american media was retarded for covering celebrities having babies.
It's only cheating if you get caught.
Your tax money is not to investigate fraud or corruption of officials but to chase down these despicable and immoral cheaters who cheat on your tests! A crime that is unlike any other.
That is japan for you. This country is fucking ridiculous. Come here and take a look at the workings here. Japan is not a wonderful place like you foolish foreigners imagine it to be.
good plan, dumb accomplice.
The accomplice needed to post the questions on the Internet to get answers from random people? Terrible plan.
Getting answers from random people is not the problem.
Posting the actual photo of the questions on the internet is a stupid thing to do. Didn't it even cross his mind that somebody might recognize the photos!?
- Anonymous
21:14 03/03/2011
Well; the stupid thing was to not use a public computer.
you might recognize the photos, but you have no idea who took them.
err.. didn't you read the article? :/
Of course, initially you wouldn't have any idea who took them. But the authorities can trace who posted them.
I think the issue with recognizing the photos is in that people can recognize the template used for printing them on the paper and notice that they are university exam questions.
If the person just tapped it out on his iPhone, then he could have masked it as just homework or something more innocuous.
Even then, uni exams still on paper? If it's important enough to involve a manhunt, maybe they should use computerized tests on locked out computers in rooms with surveillance cameras.
The Japanese media calls him a boy because the age of majority in Japan is 20.
At least come up with a more awesome plan almost like planning a heist. It'll be so awesome that even when you get caught you can feel good about it, like in a film
I don't get it. At most you have 3 hours for a paper. How can you get the answers that quick through such tedious process while answering other questions? I don't remember Yahoo! Answer replies that quick either.
And the time taken to sneak your phone and snap it when nobody's looking... shouldn't be that quick too.
Would've been faster to ask the accomplice to look it up from the books and reply straight to him.
But still, that might only work for under 10 questions. :S
Well unless his accomplice is like Homura from Puella Magi Madoka, it is all possible...
Maybe a hidden camera or microphone that has live feed?
You obviously don't attend any University. (No harm intended if you do; still...where is it that relaxed?)
A exam is at least 4 hours; sometimes six; averaging av five.
My local university has no less than 25 cases a year; and that's only the ones that get caught.
Don't go 'you obviously...'. I'm a university graduate. Thank you for bringing that up.
Max hours per paper at my university is 3 hours. It's pretty standard in my country and neighbouring countries. Shortest that I've known of here is 30 minutes (for simple papers).
Obviously you didn't realize that every university has different systems. Exams are stressful here even for those who are prepared. Relaxed? At least 4 hours? Now I'm not even sure if you attended one. (No harm intended too if you do.)
Even if it's 6 hours, you couldn't have gotten the answers from the net that fast unless you're damn lucky. Ever used Yahoo! Answer?
(You started it...)
Posting "Obviously you..." at the start of a reply to any internet comment incites indignation.
Yeah right, even 4 hour exams are nearly torture. 6 should be against human rights.
He likely had accomplices lined up to view the questions.
There is also speculation he was using a hands-free headset...
Sadly those who answered on Yahoo Answers weren't trolls, or there'll be more epic lulz to be had
Japs are too nice to troll
Now we have a good example of a rotten society. Hopefully this will not happen anywhere else.
Nahhh, he'll get hired for his creativity, like how hackers are hired into respectable software companies.
What? Nineteen is no longer a teen? Ah, the loss of innocence.
Thanks to Shigefumi Matsuzawa we now know that everybody under 30 is still a youth. ^^
I love it that way, 0 -> 30 should be youth (^^)
Oh, shit. It' almost end for me.... and forever alone...
Well; it's the japanese.
Of course they are a teen, but they are also not yet considered a man. In Japan, coming of age (i.e. being allowed to drink, smoke, etc. or otherwise being considered an adult) happens at age 20. Before then, they are simply considered to be a youth, teen or otherwise.
If he was going to cheat, hi might have used VPN, they are cheap. Supposing he have access to a computer with public IP, he could have send data there through web interface, and from there the computer would have through cheap paid VPN in some obscure country like Mexico post the question on Yahoo!. No one would find who post that. Or he could used tor anonymizing service. Of course, a little programming skills would be needed to make it work with a phone. I dunno if someone actually answered his question, in such a short time like exam, he should have setup privave forum on some free webhosting and pay a good and educated friend for helping him.
"...but rather than a report to university authorities or some angry ranting on 2ch, the investigation took the form of a full police manhunt by Japan’s national high-tech crime unit in Kyoto, who demanded logs from Yahoo! and then traced the IPs used back to the cheater."
I'll love to see what rantings are on 2ch than watch police panic!
"..posted the photo onto the Japanese version of “Yahoo! Answers”"
Idiot, next time use Wikipedia to conceal your ID.. unless it's a math or subjective question.
What Wikipedia, we use Facebook these days.
Should have use google instead... lmgtfy.com/?q=how+to+use+google
or Wolfram for maths http://www.wolframalpha.com [www.wolframalpha.com]
At least delete those questions after they have finished. They need to destroy those evidence before there's contradiction
You know you suck balls if you attended prep-school and still needed to cheat.
now, let me get this
japan biggest news story in months is a boy being arrested for cheating? o.O
so where is all this violence or sexual act that
anime\manga\games seem to be influencing?
Japan as official become the land of WTF!?!
The manga ban in working.
Let me correct you, "The world has officially become the planet of WTF!?!"
You used to go to a good school, but now you can't, how does it feel?
This guy is an hero! Give him his due credit cause now we know what might happen if we do something like this...
This required a police force? Not little loli getting gang raped in a park bathroom, wannabe magical girl setting fire to stuff, Teacher staging a sex ring instead of a class or even someone pretending to be a samurai going on a killing spree? Seriously what the fuck?
20 is the age of majority in Japan, so the report is technically correct. He won't be a man until he ages another year.
Focusing all news broadcast in such a minor event, such a waste.
Broadcasters trying to turn their audience attention away for more important facts, as usual. The pull of government over telecommunications.
What does anything you ranted about have to do with 'false American freedoms'? Freedom is something granted by the government, not by individuals. If you're going to bash on America, at least bash on something that makes sense, moron.
Meanwhile at the police station
Stranger: So what they get you for?
19yr old: Cheating on a Uni entrance exam, you?
Stranger: Attempted assault on a police officer.
19yr old: Wow that actually sounds like...bad.
Stranger: No! I farted at a tollbooth, the guy called for back up claiming i was trying to poison him.
Police: Shut up, this is what you get for using chemical weapons for trying to get out of paying a $1 toll.
It's news items like this, that make it easy to say I love anime, and Iove Japanese school girls, but I have no desire to actually live in Japan.
Really, this is the lead story in Japan?
I am actually finding it hard to say anything. Just dumbfounded.