Tuesday 17 May 2016

Iraq stop Internet access in the country because of exam malpractice

Surprising isn't it? Well, the Iraqi government has shut down internet access in a bid to discourage examination malpractice among students taking exams this week.

Meanwhile, this is not the first time the country is shutting down internet access as they periodically do it for political, security and examination purposes.
According to data from DYN Research , which is an organization that tracks web outages all over the world. The company's report on their data indicates that internet access was slightly entirely blocked for complete three hours on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday morning this week, between 5AM and 8AM local time.

DYN reported...
"There was certainly a lot of skepticism about this explanation last summer, but the outages did coincide with exams and nothing emerged to dispute the explanation," Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at DYN, tells Vocativ.

It is understood that the Iraqi government periodically block internet and even social media sites in attempt to fight insecurity and other purposes. Apart from Iraq, other nations like Uzbekistan, forced a nationwide block in 2014, also in Indian state of Gujarat, blocked mobile networks for complete four hours this year to thwart cheating on a national test for accountants examination.

My question is this, do you think this can happen in a country like Nigeria? Can you stay for four hours without Internet access? This means no faecbook, no whatsapp, no browsing, no YouTube etc

Also read=
how-to-use-itunes-with-your-android.

Do you think this can help reduce examination malpractice in Nigeria if the government should follow suit?

Previous Post
Next Post

2 comments :

  1. Cutting off the network signal is indeed the best and fastest way to prevent students from cheating on exams. This is also common in other countries.

    ReplyDelete
  2. In order to prevent students from cheating in examinations and power off the network is somewhat exaggerated

    ReplyDelete