I made a post in here a couple months ago when I was first notified of a disciplinary hearing with Columbia University. It was stated that my website broke school policy because it allegedly promoted cheating.
After a couple weeks of hearings, we beat the case :)
Columbia understood the website was made in an effort to help students who struggle, while I understood it would be best to no longer use the schools resources to promote my startup.
If any mods need to reach out for proof, I would be happy to share the letter and further personal details.
On Friday I received the letter stating I will face a disciplinary hearing for quote, "Specifically, it is alleged that you created an Artificial Intelligence tool and distributed it to students attending the School of ..." (A specific school within my university).
On April 17th, I launched my startup, an AI powered PDF Document and URL Link reader website to help students in this generation and the next who face an increasing cognitive challenge in the classroom. I'm so passionate about this issue that I don't even charge anything, completely free to use. Since launching a little over a month ago I've amassed over 1,200 users. My website is not an essay writer, can't complete exams or homework assignments for students. In simple terms, it is nothing more than a reading assistant there to help students with dense documents/articles/videos.
I'm now left with uncertainty. This is a top university and I fear they will demand I shut down the website if I want to stay enrolled. I have some defense arguments planned that I believe should help, but man I'm scared.
My warning to other high school/ college students creating similar AI projects, keep it away from your specific institution. There's thousands of schools out there to market to, don't risk your entire education like I just did.
One has to say - getting a AI-generated summary of dense material is not the same as reading, pondering and understanding dense material. You are at university to, in part, develop your ability to process and understand dense, difficult material. Using an AI here provides a crutch that prohibits individuals from developing these critical skills.
That doesn't even delve into the hallucination issue... which is still present even for this type of processing.
In general, students should depend on less AI, not more. Perhaps I'm getting old, but I see nothing good coming from a tool like this for students...
they have me as breaking their academic dishonesty and facilitating academic dishonesty policies. My website is nothing more than a reading assistant. It can't be used to help students cheat, which is why it shouldn't breach these rules
Irrespective of what your application does for students, the text on the first page refers to turning hours of homework into minutes, which could sound a lot like “does your homework for you.” I have no opinion on the subject not knowing the policies or having evaluated the product though
Your site says it "Turn hours of homework into minutes" and provides "instant responses and insights to all your questions" -- this definitely gives the reasonable impression it can be used to cheat on assignments.
> “offering instant responses and insights to all your questions”
This phrasing sounds a lot like saying it’ll give you answers to your problem set out whatever.
On a slightly different and opinionated note, bite the bullet and stay in school. A lot of people push the “you don’t need school” ideology but considering you’re in a top school and (presumably) studying CS you’ll get a lot of value from just having the degree (whether or not you agree with this practice is besides the point)
Depending on how important this is for you, I'd get an attorney involved and ask the faculty members who are accusing you "HOW are you facilitating academic dishonesty".
It's really easy to accuse someone of something, it's much harder to substantiate it, especially when it's factually not true.
I know attorney's aren't free (nor cheap), that's why I asked how important this is for you, and if it's worth putting your [current] academic pursuits in jeopardy.
"paste the URL of the content you want to analyze" -- Apparently this has been a problem where the content is restricted IP behind a login barrier, the URL contains an auth/login token, and the AI scrapes the restricted content without being authorized to do so. They have the right to get a judge to order you not to do that anymore. If your AI analyzes it and displays a summary, you are producing a derivative work, which is a copyright infringement, which means a judge will order you not to do that anymore.
doesn't that mean the student has to actually breach the policy? it sounds like at the moment that they don't like what he's done, but can't seem to explain exactly what makes it academic crime.
I agree that they should explain and are most likely just dropping the hammer on something they don’t like.
My point is school boards have no requirement to be transparent and generally aren’t something you can appeal or use the actual legal system to help you with. If they decide they want to kick you out, that’s it. They’re intimidating the student and I guess what I’m saying is the student should seriously consider whether or not they want the degree because I don’t think they can fight the academic dishonesty board even if the student is technically right.
Step 1: IMMEDIATELY disable the URL-fetcher's ability to fetch from your university's website(s). Any content on your system that you already scraped from your university's website, purge that too and keep no copies. It sounds like that's what they're mad about.
Get your legal advisor to tell them that you have done so (all communication seriously needs to go through your legal rep). It will probably give you some breathing room.
As a college student who suffers from crippling ADHD I needed something that helped level the playing field. Not only for myself but a staggering 30% of students consider themselves neurodivergent and I believe the spike in anxiety and depression amongst gen z is an indicator that our generation needs help with their school work.
This is why I created a free to use AI tool (not profiting at all) to help our generation with their work.
The website can scan and analyze any size reading document, any article link, and any YouTube video. The tool can then respond to any prompt asked by the student.
I hope this free tool can make a difference for a struggling generation
After a couple weeks of hearings, we beat the case :)
Columbia understood the website was made in an effort to help students who struggle, while I understood it would be best to no longer use the schools resources to promote my startup.