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PayPal to reject essay-writing firms

PayPal to reject essay-writing firms
laptop Image copyright Getty Images

Payments company PayPal is going to withdraw services from essay-writing firms selling to university students.

Last month, Education Secretary Damian Hinds called on PayPal to stop processing payments for such firms, in a bid to beat academic cheating.

Mr Hinds had said it was "unethical for these companies to profit from this dishonest business".

PayPal is to begin contacting firms which use its payment system to sell academic essays online.

"PayPal is working with businesses associated with essay-writing services to ensure our platform is not used to facilitate deceptive and fraudulent practices in education," said a spokesman for the payment firm.

"PayPal will continue to diligently review and take appropriate action on accounts found to facilitate cheating that undermines academic integrity."

'Unscrupulous services'

From Wednesday, the payment company is to begin contacting essay-writing firms, giving them notice that they should "move their business elsewhere".

But this will not be an "overnight ban" - as there will be debates over which services are helping students to cheat and which are offering legitimate tutoring assistance.

This is a business that operates across national borders - so PayPal says there will need to be an international response.

University leaders have warned repeatedly about the risk that essay-writing firms, so-called "essay mills", are being used by students to cheat.

The higher education watchdog, the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA), has warned they can be "unscrupulous services that damage reputations and lives".

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"Companies that try to entice students to buy so-called plagiarism-free essays pose a real threat to the academic integrity of our higher education," said Douglas Blackstock, head of the QAA.

"These unscrupulous operators, increasingly and falsely marketing themselves as providing legitimate study aids, must be stopped in their tracks."

The QAA wrote to PayPal in November calling on the firm "to close down the payment facilities for the essay-writing companies that encourage students to cheat".

'Black market'

The education secretary had said the QAA identified 17,000 academic offences in 2016 - but it was impossible to know how many cases had gone undetected.

"Sadly there have always been some people who opt for the easy way, and the internet has seen a black market in essay-writing services spring up," said Mr Hinds.

Sir Anthony Seldon, vice-chancellor of the University of Buckingham, said: "Cheating should be tackled and the problem should not be allowed to fester any longer.

"Legislation is needed to outlaw this abominable practice, but this is a valuable first step."

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