The Good Tech Companies - Why blockchain verification could eliminate Indonesia's $22 billion fake degree problem
Episode Date: October 10, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/why-blockchain-verification-could-eliminate-indonesias-$22-billion-fake-degree-problem. Sali...b Suci partners with Space and Time, Indomobil to verify credentials for 14,000 students across 70 schools using blockchain Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #web3, #good-company, #blockhchain, #cryptocurrency, #space-and-time, #space-and-time-news, #salib-suci-foundation, #education, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Salib Suci partners with Space and Time, Indomobil to verify credentials for 14,000 students across 70 schools using blockchain
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Why blockchain verification could eliminate Indonesia's $22 billion fake degree problem?
By Ashan Pondi, greater than can a nearly century old foundation in Indonesia solve one of
education's most greater than persistent problems using technology that barely existed a decade ago?
Salib Suki Foundation, established in 1927, believes that blockchain-based credentials will
eliminate fraud, reduce verification time from weeks to seconds, and give 14,000 students across
70 schools control over their academic records in a country where 66% of the population
lacks access to traditional banking. The partnership between Salab Suki Foundation, Space and
Time, and Endomobile Group marks the first K-12 implementation of blockchain credential
verification in Indonesia following Universitas' Gadja Mata's adoption of the same system for
60,000 university students in September 2025. The combined initiative now reaches 124,000 students,
storing proof of course completion on SXT chain with SXT tokens used for direct enrollment payments.
This deployment arrives as Indonesia ranks third globally in cryptocurrency adoption with 22.
11 million registered crypto investors and positions blockchain as a cornerstone of ITS
National Digital Transformation Strategy. The move addresses multiple
systemic failures in traditional credentialing. Research shows that 64, 2% of Americans have
lied on their resume at least once, while the global fake degree market reached $22 billion
in 2022, up from $1 billion in 2015. Traditional verification processes take 72 hours to 14 days
and cost employers $20 to $123 per check, with UK institutions alone spending approximately
21 pounds. 6 million annually on 1. 8 million verification checks. Universities using blockchain
credentials report 30% fewer fraud cases and 40% higher user satisfaction, with verification time
reduced to seconds. How blockchain credentials work. Understanding blockchain credentials
requires no background in cryptography or distributed systems. The technology operates through
three parties, an issuer, the school or university, a holder, the student, and a verify
an employer or another institution. When a student completes a course, the issuing institution
creates a digital credential, signs it with a private cryptographic key, and publishes its
corresponding public key on the blockchain. The student receives the credential in a digital wallet,
similar to a secure smartphone app. When applying for a job or further education, the student
shares the credential with an employer, whose system automatically checks the digital signature
against the institution's public key stored on the blockchain. Verification happens in seconds
with zero fraud possibility. The critical distinction from traditional systems lies in data storage,
personal information and the credential itself remain off the blockchain, stored in the
student's encrypted wallet. Only the issuer's public key and cryptographic commitments,
digital fingerprints of data, reside on the blockchain, preserving privacy while enabling
verification. This architecture means that unlike centralized databases vulnerable to breaches
costing an average of $4.88 million globally in 2024, blockchain credentials distribute data
across a network with no single point of failure. Students control when and with whom to
share the ERC credentials without repeatedly contacting the issuing institution. Space and Times
implementation adds a layer of sophistication through zero-knowledge proofs, specifically their
proof of SQL technology. This critical
method allows verification of facts without revealing underlying information. For example,
an employer could verify that a student completed an English fluency course without accessing
the student's test scores, personal details, or full academic record. The system generates a mathematical
proof that the credential is authentic and the data hasn't been tampered with, which can be checked
in approximately 150,000 gas on Ethereum virtual machine compatible chains. This verification cost
is negligible compared to traditional methods while providing cryptographic certainty impossible
with paper certificates or PDF documents. Indonesia's education system creates perfect conditions
for blockchain adoption. Indonesia operates one of the world's largest education systems with 52 million
students, 3 million teachers, and approximately 400,000 schools. Despite this scale, the system
faces challenges that blockchain credentials directly address. In 2018, 70% of Indonesian 15,
year-year-old students performed below minimum competency in literacy and numeracy.
Internet penetration reached 79% in 2024 with 180 million smartphone users, yet a significant
digital divide persists between urban and rural areas, with rural populations often lacking
connectivity and devices. The country's 66% unbanked population creates payment barriers
for educational services, while credential fraud remains a persistent problem in a country
where only 49% of American employers verify education credentials, partly due to cost and complexity.
The government's digital transformation initiatives create supportive infrastructure for blockchain
education. Indonesia's Digital Roadmap 2021 to 2024 focuses on modernizing digital infrastructure
through the Palapa Ring Project for nationwide connectivity, accelerating digital
government, strengthening the digital economy, and building digital literacy. The National Strategy for
artificial intelligence 2020 to 2045 prioritizes education and research alongside health,
bureaucratic reform, and food security. The Merdeka Belajar, Emancipated Learning Initiative
launched in 2019 aims to improve learning outcomes by reducing road learning and integrating technology
into curriculum. Indonesia's regulatory framework evolved significantly with P.OJK No 27,
2024th in December 2024, which reclassified crypto assets as digital financial asset.
and transferred supervision to the Financial Services Authority.
The country's Indonesia Digital Vision 2045 explicitly identifies blockchain as a cornerstone
for national growth targeting a $4.5 trillion economy, Indonesia's cryptocurrency adoption
provides essential user readiness for blockchain initiatives.
The country ranks third globally in crypto adoption after India and Nigeria, according to
Chainalysis 2024 data, with $157 billion in crypto value in.
inflows from 2023 to 2024 and 22. 11 million registered crypto investors representing 21, 16%
growth from the previous year. Total crypto asset transaction volume grew from 122 trillion
Indonesian rupees in January to November 2003 to 556 Indonesian rupees, 53 trillion in the same period
of 2024, a 356% year on year increase. The government is testing blockchain-based-based
digital certificates for land ownership and certificates of competencies for the education sector
to combat fraud and verify authenticity using on-chain data. With 70% of the population of
working age and a median age of 30 representing a digitally savvy, mobile first generation,
Indonesia demonstrates demographic advantages for technology adoption that many developed nations
lack. Salab Suki Foundation's 97 years of education meet cutting-edge technology. Salab Suki Foundation
traces its origins to August 17, 1927, when three priests from the Order of the Holy Cross founded
Heiliga Cruz Stichting with 100 guilders in capital. The organization changed its name to Yayasun
Salab Suki on July 27, 1960, and today operates under the Diocese of Bondung with headquarters
at J.L. Van de Venter 18, Bondung 40, 112. The Foundation's 70 schools serve approximately 14,000
students across West Java, including locations in Bandung, Karawang, Purwakarta, Subong,
Tasik Malaya, Chirabon, Indramayu, and other cities. Schools range from preschool and kindergarten
through senior high school, focusing on developing learners who are intelligent and of good
character through three aspects. Spiritual attitude, religious education and guidance counseling,
knowledge, with special attention to English and Mandarin languages, and skills, arts, sports,
computer media. Pastor Leo Van Bearden, OSC, serves as chairman of Salab Suki Foundation and
views the blockchain initiative as aligned with the foundation's mission of holistic education.
At Salab Suki, we've spent nearly a century building trust in education, but we know that
trust needs to extend beyond our walls. By adopting space and times platform, we're giving
our students credentials that travel with them, credentials that cannot be forged and can be
verified anywhere in the world, Van Bearden stated. The Foundation's implementation focuses initially
on English language fluency test credentials for its approximately 14,000 K-12 students, with course
completion proof recorded on SXT chain. Students receive digital wallets preloaded with SXT tokens
to pay for course enrollment directly, eliminating cash transactions and intermediary fees while
providing a payment solution for families without traditional bank accounts. The Foundation's adoption
strategy leverages Indonesia's existing educational technology landscape. The country's edtech market
grew from $1122 million in 2019 to $906 million in 2022, with projections reaching $1.8 billion by
27 at a 15% CAGR. Major platforms like Ruonguru, which hosted over 1 million students in the
first two months of COVID-19, demonstrate Indonesian students' readiness for digital learning tools.
Salib Suki's blockchain implementation builds on this foundation by adding verifiable credentials to educational content,
creating a complete ecosystem where students learn, prove their learning, and control their academic records.
The foundation's nearly 100 years of educational service combined with cutting-edge blockchain infrastructure positions it to model a hybrid approach where traditional educational values meet technological innovation.
Indomobile groups expansion from automobiles into education infrastructure.
Indomobile Group's involvement in education technology represents a strategic expansion beyond its core
automotive business. Founded in 1976 from the unification of PT Indohiro and the original
PT Indomobile, the company operatises one of Indonesia's largest integrated automotive businesses,
distributing Mercedes-Benz, Nissan, Suzuki, Kino, Kia, Volkswagen, Audi, Volvo, and numerous
other global vehicle brands. With manufacturing facilities in Jakarta,
Beccasie and Perwakarta Regency, annual revenue in the billions, and public trading on the
Indonesian stock exchange, Indomobile represents established corporate infrastructure rather than a
speculative technology startup. The company's automotive expertise would seem to have little
connection to educational credentials, yet President-Director Jusak Kirtwajojo articulates a clear
philosophy connecting the two domains. Indomobile has always believed in building long-term
infrastructure that supports national development. Education is a critical part of that mission,
Kirtowa Jojo explained. We're not just helping students verify the ERC credentials. We're helping to build
the foundation for Indonesia's digital economy, and that includes making sure every student,
no matter where they are, can prove what they've learned and access global opportunities.
The company subsidiary PT Indomobile Educasi Utama operates, Teach Cast with Oxford, a technology-based
English Conversation Training Program partnered with Oxford University Press that delivers
affordable English education to small towns and rural areas using certified American teachers.
This existing education infrastructure provided the foundation for expanding into blockchain-based
credentials, where Endomobile contributes corporate sponsorship, business development, and operational
support to the space and time partnership.
The blockchain education initiative addresses a problem Endomobile understands from its financing
operations. P.T. Endomobile Finance, 91, 98% owned subsidiary, provides vehicle financing,
where verification of employment, income, and creditworthiness creates friction in the customer
journey. Traditional employment verification takes three to 14 days and costs $20 to $123 to
$123 per check, with mortgage lenders typically verifying twice per loan for total costs
exceeding $500 per transaction when co-borrowers are included. If blockchain credential
verify educational qualifications instantly, the same technology could eventually streamline
employment verification, income verification, and other documents required for financial services.
The education implementation surveys is a proof of concept for broader applications across
Indomobile's business ecosystem, demonstrating corporate strategic thinking rather than philanthropicide
project. Space and Time's zero-knowledge database powers verifiable credentials. Space
Space and time emerged in 2022 as a blockchain infrastructure company founded by Nate Holliday,
CEO, former global go-to market and operations leader at Teradata, and Scott Dykstra,
CTO, former VP of cloud engineering at Teradata, backed by Microsoft's M12 ventures with over
$50 million in funding including a $20 million Series A in August 2024. The company describes
itself as the blockchain for ZK-proven data, and Crypto's first verifiable, decentralized,
zero-knowledge-proven database.
The platform functions as a decentralized data warehouse that indexes blockchain data from
major chains including Ethereum, Bitcoin, ZK Sync, Polygon, Sway, Avalanche, and Aptos,
allows developers to join in-chain and off-chain data using SQL queries, and provides
cryptographic proofs that data and query results remain tamper-proof.
SXT Chain, Space and Times Layer 1 blockchain, launched on Mainet, following TestNet announcement at Chainlink SmartCon, specifically to deliver zero-knowledge-proven data to smart contracts and AI agents.
The architecture consists of four integrated components. Indexer nodes collect and decode blockchain data from Genesis Block Forward using lightweight hardware, transforming raw data into queryable relational database tables.
validator nodes create threshold signatures on cryptographic commitments, digital fingerprints,
and can secure both blockchain data and off-chain data including real-world assets, market data,
and educational credentials. Prover nodes execute SQL queries against validated data and generate
zero knowledge proofs of query correctness, currently proving analytic queries on 200,000 to
600,000 rows sub-second and scaling to millions of rows under a minute. The ZK roll-up layer built on
ZK Synx Elastic Chain Stack handles client payments, staking, node operator coordination, and third-party
defy applications for liquid staking and derivatives. Alejandro Lanapsa, head of partnerships at
space and time, emphasizes the company's focus on real-world utility rather than speculative
technology. Greater than, we built space and time to solve a specific problem. How do you give
smart greater than contracts access to data they can trust? In education, that problem is even greater
than more critical because credentials are the currency of opportunity. If you greater than can't
prove what you've learned, you can't access the next opportunity. The SXT token serves as the
economic layer securing the network, with validators required to stake SXT tokens as collateral,
earning network fees for honest behavior while facing slashing for malicious actions. All transactions
use SX tokens including query payments, split between validators and table owners, data ingestion
fees paid to validators, verifiable compute payments for ZK proof generation, and course enrollment
payments in the education implementation. Global blockchain education market projects explosive
growth despite implementation challenges. Market research firms project explosive growth for blockchain
in education despite the technology remaining in early implementation stages. Business research
insights values the global blockchain in education market at $0.35 billion in 2024, project
expecting growth to $9.39 billion by 2033 at a C.A.G.R. of 43. Ninety-four percent, market, as
estimates the blockchain in edtech market at $2.1 billion in 2024, expecting $30.3 billion by
2034 at CAGR of 30. 4%. Persistence market research calculates $2.4 billion in 2025 reaching $11.4 billion by
2032 at CAGR of 24. 9%. Despite varying baseline estimates, all major research firms confirm
CAGRs ranging from 24, 9% to 43, 94%, indicating 10 to 40x market expansion within the next
decade. North America currently holds 40% market share, K-12 education captured 28. 8% of market share in
24, and blockchain education platforms generated 65, 8% of total revenue in 2024. The broader
credential verification market provides context for blockchain's growth potential. Markets and
markets values the identity verification market at $14.34 billion in 2025, projecting $29.32 billion by
2030 at CAGR of 15. 4% driven by over 1.1 million identity theft cases.
reported in the U.S. alone in 2023, according to the Federal Trade Commission.
Grandview Research projects the market from $9.87 billion in 2022 to $33, $93 billion by 2030 at C.A.G.R. of 16.
7%. The credential verification organization services market measures $3.5 billion inches 2024 with
projection to $9.2 billion by 2030 at CAGR of 11.
2%, while the digital badge market grows from $312.2 million in 2025 to $969.7 million by 2032 at
CAGR of 17. 6%. The confluence of identity verification demand, digital credential adoption,
and blockchain security positions the technology at the intersection of multiple growth
markets. Leading universities demonstrate practical implementation despite market immaturity.
issued digital certificates for 111 master's graduates in 2017 using blockcerts on Bitcoin
blockchain, creating an open source toolkit that other institutions adopted.
University of Melbourne became the first Australian university to issue blockchain credentials
in 2017. University of Nicosia in Cyprus began issuing diplomas with authenticity
verification through Bitcoin blockchain in 2016 and operates Block. Co., embraced by over
100 educational institutions and organizations worldwide. Malta became the first nation to use
blockchain and education in September 2017, partnering with Learning Machine Group to issue
digital certificates, training certificates, and equivalency statements. In India, Dr. APJ Abdul-Kalam
Technical University awarded approximately 50,000 degrees to engineering and management graduates
using blockchain in September 2025. However, most implementations remain pilot projects or
single institution experiments rather than system-wide deployments, demonstrating proof of concept
without proving scalability. The $22 billion fake degree industry and 70% resume fraud rate.
The credential fraud problem that blockchain aims to solve reaches staggering proportions backed by
multiple research sources. A 2023 study found that 64, 2% of Americans have lied on their
resume at least once, representing an estimated 107.4 million Americans in the workforce.
up from 55% in 2022 with Google searches for lying on resumes, increasing 19% in 2020
versus 2022. Among 18 to 25 year olds, 80, 4% admitted to lying on resumes, with rates declining
by age but remaining above 46% even for seniors 65 and older. Specifically regarding education
credentials, 29, 6% have lied about their college degree, with 54% of those lying about having a
they don't possess, 35, 1% lying about their area of study, and 26% lying about the grade
or GPA they received. The global fake degree market reached $22 billion in 2022, up from $1 billion
in 2015, with fake degree certificates and transcripts costing an average of $197.83 to purchase
online. The fake degree industry in the United States alone measures over $500 million annually, with
over 50% of people claiming new PhDSIN the U.S. possessing fake degrees, according to some
estimates. Organizations that fell victim to occupational fraud show that 43% did not run
background checks on perpetrators prior to hiring, while only 49% of U.S. employers verify
education credentials despite 70% of resumes containing false information according to multiple
studies. When caught, 81, 4% of those who lied faced consequences, with 54. 9%
fired are having offers withdrawn, 14, 5% investigated by police, and 13, 4% receiving fines.
The financial impact on organizations justifies investment in better verification systems.
Organizations lose 5% of annual revenue to fraud according to the Association of Certified
Fraud Examiner's 2024 report, equaling $4,000, $7 trillion worldwide annually,
with median fraud loss of $145,000 per case, up 24% from $244,000.
2022, and average loss per month of $9,900, up from $8,300 in 2022.
The national average cost per hire measures $4,700, while hiring someone with fraudulent credentials
can cost employers $17,000 or more including wasted training, poor job performance, and increased
turnover. Traditional verification costs add to this burden, with UK institutions conducting
1. 8 million verification checks in 2019 through HEDD at minimum 12 pounds per check for 21 pounds.
6 million annually, enough to create almost 1,000 additional graduate jobs per year.
Blockchain verification systems that reduce fraud by up to 75% according to some studies
while cutting verification time from days to seconds present compelling return on investment
despite implementation costs. Adopting blockchain for education requires navigating
privacy regulations and technical complexity. Implementation challenges temper optimistic projections
and require careful attention from institutions considering blockchain credentials.
Scalability presents a significant challenge, with blockchain networks handling only limited
transactions at any given time, creating delays during high-volume periods.
Mitt Sloan Professor Stuart Madnick's research documented 72 publicly reported blockchain security
breaches from 2011 to 2018 with over $1 billion in losses, with sophisticated forgeries and
inside jobs requiring more than blockchain verification alone. The absence of universal standards
makes integration difficult, creating situations where student credentials on one institution's
blockchain cannot be easily accessible or verifiable by another institution using a different
blockchain system, producing barriers to seamless sharing, credit transfers, and global credential
verification. Data privacy regulations create particular complexity for immutable blockchain records.
The general data protection regulation mandates the right to be forgotten, meaning individuals
can request that personal data be erased, yet blockchain's immutability means data cannot be
altered or deleted once recorded. This fundamental contradiction creates significant challenges
for GDPR compliance. A 2019 incident found child pornography images in the Bitcoin's Satoshi
vision ledger that could not be removed, only filtered at the browser level, demonstrating the
permanence problem. Lost blockchain keys present another irreversible problem since unlike traditional
systems with password recovery mechanisms, lost cryptographic keys mean permanently lost access
TOC redentials. Madnick warns against jumping on the bandwagon, without caution, stating,
it's not just whether it's breakable or not, but whether it can be misused, and emphasizing that
blockchain is unbreakable. Thinking represents dangerous.
over-simplification. Organizational barriers include the critical lack of blockchain engineers
and expertise, with implementation of blockchain across many sectors increasing demand for
qualified blockchain resources. Financial barriers require high initial investment for complete digital
transformation, presenting particular challenges for small and medium-sized institutions. Resistance
to change from academic staff, uncertainty about implementation and security, and lack of
management commitment slow adoption. Research and applied sciences notes that the complexity of
settings, the difficulty of terminology, the lack of technical expertise, and the wide range of
different specifications can make IT very difficult for the learners, educators, and other professional
parties in the chain to understand and use this technology application. However, properly
implemented systems using W3C standards for decentralized identifiers and verifiable credentials,
combined with zero-knowledge proofs like space and times proof of SQL,
can address many privacy concerns by keeping personally identifiable information off the blockchain
while still enabling verification. Indonesia's position in global blockchain education adoption.
Indonesia's blockchain education initiatives occur within a broader global context of digital
credential experimentation. Several U.S. states, including Arkansas,
Alabama, North Dakota, and South Carolina are experimenting with digital learner and employment records,
also known as LERD or digital wallets, with Arizona State University's ASU pocket functioning as a digital
wallet and portfolio capturing holistic evidence of learning in any format. The European blockchain
services infrastructure operates a peer-to-peer network of distributed nodes across EU member
states plus Norway and Liechtenstein with 39 nodes keeping identical ledger copies, facilitating secure
exchange of educational credentials across member states for multinational recognition and verification.
Belgium and Italy have piloted cross-border credential verification showing the steps for issuing,
storing, and verifying student identity and transcripts of records between KU Lovin and University
de Bologna. The T3 network initiated by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation includes over
1,500 diverse stakeholders including employers, education providers, government agencies, non-profits, and
partners working to enable equitable digital transformation of the talent marketplace where
all learning counts, skills are used like currency, and learners and workers are empowered with
data. Rob Coyle, technical program manager for digital credentials at 1 EdTech, reports 75% growth
from 2020 to 2022 in digital credentials with over 75 million credentials that have been issued,
and there's something like 50,000 credential providers. Surveys show that 60% of industry experts
believe more employers will migrate towards skills-based hiring, selecting candidates based on abilities
rather than degrees or pedigree, with 57% of experts confirming that employers will hold more
value in alternative or microcredentials. Indonesia's third place global ranking in cryptocurrency
adoption, 22, 11 million registered crypto investors, $157 billion in crypto value inflows from
2023, 2024, and 356% year-on-year increase in transaction volatility.
volumes positioned the country ahead of most developed nations in user readiness for
blockchain applications.
The government's clear regulatory framework through POJK number 27, 2024th Digital Rupee Central
Bank Digital Currency Initiative, Indonesia Digital Vision 2045 identifying blockchain as cornerstone
for national growth and testing of blockchain-based certificates for land ownership
and education competencies demonstrate institutional support rarely seen in other countries. With
70% working age population, median age of 30, 79% internet penetration with 180 million
smartphone users and projected 135 million middle class by 2030. Indonesia combines demographic
advantages, technological infrastructure, and regulatory clarity that many mature markets
lack. The Salab Suki Foundation and UGM implementations serve as proof that Indonesia can move
from blockchain follower to blockchain leader in specific sectors. Real solution are
premature technology adoption? The Salib Suki Foundation blockchain initiative represents a genuine
attempt to solve real problems rather than technology theater. The credential fraud statistics,
64, 2% resume fraud, $22 billion fake degree market, verification inefficiencies, 3 to 14 days,
21 pounds, 6 million annually in UK alone, and Indonesia-specific challenges, 66% unbanked,
70% of 15-year-olds below minimum competency, create legitimate business cases for new approaches.
Space n times zero knowledge-proof architecture addresses key privacy concerns by keeping personal data off-chain
while enabling verification, and the S-XT token payment mechanism solves financial inclusion problems
for unbanked populations. The implementation follows proven models from MIT,
University of Nicosia, and Malta while leveraging Indonesia's cryptocurrency adoption leadership
and government digital transformation initiatives. However, critical questions remain about scalability,
interoperability, and unintended consequences. The initiative covers 124,000 students across UGM and
Salab Suki Foundation, yet Indonesia's education system serves 52 million students across 400,000 schools.
Scaling blockchain verification to millions of students and hundreds of thousands of
institutions requires technical infrastructure, standardization, and interoperability that current
implementations have not demonstrated. The absence of universal standards means credentials on
space and times SXT chain may not be easily verifiable by institutions using different blockchain
platforms, potentially creating new silos rather than eliminating old ones. The evidence suggests
cautious optimism is warranted. Universities using blockchain report 30% fewer fraud cases and 40% higher
user satisfaction with verification time reduced to seconds, representing measurable improvements
over traditional systems. The market projections of $9.39 billion by 2033 at 43. 94% CAGR indicate
investor confidence backed by real adoption trends, while the digital badge market growth from $312.2 million
to $969.7 million by 2032 demonstrates broader momentum toward verifiable digital credentials.
Indonesia's unique position with world-leading cryptocurrency adoption, clear government support,
young digitally native population, and acute credential fraud problems creates conditions
where blockchain education initiatives may succeed despite challenges that stalled implementations
in other countries. The Salab Suki Foundation's 97 years of educational service provides
institutional credibility and long-term perspective that speculative technology pilots lack.
Whether blockchain credentials become standard infrastructure or remain new,
niche applications will depend on solving interoperability challenges, navigating privacy regulations,
and demonstrating value beyond fraud prevention to include genuine improvements in educational
quality and student opportunity. Don't forget to like and share the story. Thank you for listening
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