| 1. | | I Ghostwrite Chinese Students' Ivy League Admissions Essays (vice.com) |
| 282 points by misiti3780 on Aug 31, 2014 | 217 comments |
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| 2. | | Notes on bookmarks from 1997 (notes.pinboard.in) |
| 220 points by spindritf on Aug 31, 2014 | 52 comments |
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| 3. | | Common App Rejections (developer.apple.com) |
| 220 points by kmfrk on Aug 31, 2014 | 128 comments |
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| 4. | | 71 TiB DIY NAS Based on ZFS on Linux (louwrentius.com) |
| 164 points by ors on Aug 31, 2014 | 129 comments |
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| 5. | | If programming languages were weapons (tipling.com) |
| 159 points by lelf on Aug 31, 2014 | 63 comments |
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| 6. | | Boeing Flies on 99% Ada (adaic.com) |
| 150 points by galapago on Aug 31, 2014 | 157 comments |
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| 7. | | Space Shuttle and Space Station Photographed Together (nasa.gov) |
| 146 points by otoolep on Aug 31, 2014 | 42 comments |
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| 8. | | AnandTech Publisher Anand Shimpi Headed to Apple (recode.net) |
| 140 points by mstolpm on Aug 31, 2014 | 48 comments |
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| 9. | | Avoiding Event Chains in Single Page Applications (code-experience.com) |
| 130 points by dmnd on Aug 31, 2014 | 63 comments |
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| 10. | | Popping a shell on the Oculus developer portal (bitquark.co.uk) |
| 114 points by bitquark on Aug 31, 2014 | 16 comments |
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| 11. | | Bayesian vs. frequentist: squabbling among the ignorant (madhadron.com) |
| 110 points by madhadron on Aug 31, 2014 | 38 comments |
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| 12. | | Embedding Scheme for a game mission scripting DSL (carloscarrasco.com) |
| 106 points by carloscm on Aug 31, 2014 | 24 comments |
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| 13. | | Richard Dawkins' response to “What scientific idea is ready for retirement?" (edge.org) |
| 101 points by __Joker on Aug 31, 2014 | 71 comments |
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| 14. | | A call to arms: Helping Internet services accept anonymous users (torproject.org) |
| 102 points by erkose on Aug 31, 2014 | 15 comments |
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| 15. | | DebConf 2014's QA with Linus Torvalds [video] (debian.net) |
| 109 points by caiobegotti on Aug 31, 2014 | 27 comments |
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| 16. | | A Financial Model Comparing Car Ownership with UberX in Los Angeles (gohe.ro) |
| 95 points by kaleazy on Aug 31, 2014 | 111 comments |
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| 17. | | Curl.io – Share files from your terminal or ssh (curl.io) |
| 107 points by dizda on Aug 31, 2014 | 65 comments |
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| 18. | | This is why you never end up hiring good developers (qz.com) |
| 94 points by jpkenobi on Aug 31, 2014 | 50 comments |
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| 19. | | Want to fight climate change? Build more nuclear power (csmonitor.com) |
| 78 points by markmassie on Aug 31, 2014 | 158 comments |
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| 20. | | Apple Working with American Express on iPhone 6 Mobile Payments (recode.net) |
| 80 points by srikar on Aug 31, 2014 | 75 comments |
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| 21. | | Uber and Lyft Have Become Indistinguishable Commodities (nytimes.com) |
| 80 points by lxm on Aug 31, 2014 | 62 comments |
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| 22. | | Do Students Really Have Different Learning Styles? (kqed.org) |
| 76 points by akbarnama on Aug 31, 2014 | 39 comments |
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| 23. | | Random Startup Generator (ykombinator.com) |
| 76 points by bwy on Aug 31, 2014 | 27 comments |
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| 24. | | Replicated PostgreSQL with pgpool2 (stapelberg.de) |
| 73 points by secure on Aug 31, 2014 | 45 comments |
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| 25. | | [dupe] HabitRPG – A free habit-building app that treats your life like a game (habitrpg.com) |
| 70 points by phreeza on Aug 31, 2014 | 33 comments |
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| 26. | | The FCC’s next CTO is a net neutrality expert (washingtonpost.com) |
| 67 points by Libertatea on Aug 31, 2014 | 4 comments |
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| 27. | | Shen is a portable functional programming language (shenlanguage.org) |
| 65 points by curtis on Aug 31, 2014 | 34 comments |
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| 28. | | Transforms – Tool for web developers (westciv.com) |
| 63 points by DLion on Aug 31, 2014 | 10 comments |
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| 29. | | Interview with an Adware Author (2009) (philosecurity.org) |
| 54 points by ANTSANTS on Aug 31, 2014 | 17 comments |
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I felt pretty guilty doing the work at first, but I quickly realized that most of the assignments were so banal that I don't think the clients missed out on much learning value by outsourcing it. Why are college courses giving "major" assignments that can reasonably be completed in 5-10 hours by a smart person with no training in the field? If a college degree just means you banged out a bunch of garbage essays, as it does for many people based on the assignments I saw contracted out, should we really be outraged that some people are not doing the work themselves?
I would argue that the real scandal is not that some people are paying for help, but that many degree programs demand so little in terms of knowledge and thought that they can be easily gamed in this way. I would like to see fluffy degree programs ended, so that legitimate work in the humanities can continue without anyone wasting time and resources shuffling average Joes through the pipeline to middle class office jobs.
The most surprising discovery for me was that it seemed like after foreign language students the heaviest users of the service were education majors. No joke. I never figured out if the noticeably heavy use by education majors was a selection bias caused by the way the service was advertising itself, a sign of especially low ethics among education majors, or an indication that there might be a higher incidence of lifestyle factors (e.g. going to school while working full time) that made it difficult for them to crank out all the BS assignments required of them.
It's also interesting to me that the author of this piece seems to be an independent contractor whose business increased as she became known. Generally, I would expect ghostwriters to want to keep a low profile which makes it hard to be independent. I certainly didn't want anyone knowing how I was paying the bills when I was in it. And unless you are charging top-end rates, the overhead of marketing yourself and picking up envelopes of cash at Starbucks is probably an inefficient use of time. Both of these factors mean that a lot of people end up working for agencies that do the work of finding clients and managing payments, and also provide double blinding. So the writer never knows the identity of the client, and vice versa. It's a pretty good system overall.