Betrug bei Fahrprüfungen nimmt zu, da Kandidaten auf Bluetooth-Headsets und Imitatoren zurückgreifen

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2g30wwmnno?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=rss

Von GeoWa

6 Kommentare

  1. With how difficult it is to get a test these days, it really isn’t surprising more people are trying it on and trying to cheat on their practical exam.

    But the theory exam? It’s so easy to spend a week revising with some of the question banks and just brute force it. When I took my theory test I swear I’d already seen like 45 of the 50 questions, and the other 5 were basically common sense anyway.

  2. Sunshinetrooper87 on

    People have always cheated. I recall phones being allowed and then not being allowed in the assessment room for obvious reasons. 

  3. AwarenessWilling5435 on

    There’s something that this article doesnt tell us, although we get a few breadcrumbs. 

    Can we talk about it?

  4. concretepigeon on

    > Dr Kassem also believed long wait times to book a slot was likely to be a factor, with some people resorting to fraud for reasons such as needing to get a licence quickly for a job.

    How does this even make sense? If you’re resorting to fraud then you’ve got a slot.

    Let’s not beat around the bush. People do this because they’re dishonest and don’t have respect for the safety and wellbeing of people around them.

  5. RadiantRain3574 on

    The article could elaborate on how people are trying to impersonate on the driving test and perhaps release some postcode or ethnicity data around those individuals caught allowing resources to be better targeted to those areas.

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