A report published by
leading American newspaper Monday blamed
Pakistani GRIDS Software House, reap millions of
dollars for selling false qualifications online.
"GRIDS make tens of
millions of dollars annually by offering degrees
online through hundreds
of fantastic schools. Witnesses and false
accreditation provided schools with an air of
credibility. But when their
customers call, talking with suppliers to eliminate GRIDS in
Karachi, saysthe report by the New York Times.
The company, however, issued
a statement saying that the NYT's reporters based
on unfounded accusations and fabricated.
A message on the
website of the
story "groundless, poor, slander, based
on false and defamatory accusations," he
said and added that he would ask the New York Times.
The report mentions that the
websites managed by GRIDS degrees online offers dozens
of disciplines such as nursing, engineering works
and certificates that bear the signature of the Minister
of Foreign Affairs John Kerry. Part of the company's
sales technique involves posing as officials of
the Government of the United States.
Countless news
reports, even if false, fabricated online programs
are guaranteed to boost your ranking in the search
engines of the Internet.
"The news is made. Teachers are
paid actors. Campuses exist only as photos on the
server. Degrees are not true that test
', says the NYT's news report.
The report
adds that the company based in Karachi, which has
more than 2,000 people and is
called main exporting software of Pakistan, also sells
some software applications.
But according
to a former initiates, business
documents and detailed analysis of their web sites, the
main activity of the GRIDS were selling
fake degrees scam trees and back to a regime
of the age of the Internet worldwide, "according to the New York
Times.
Based on the
information of former employees, the NYT telesales in
Karachi claims the agent GRIDS serve, not only to
customers who understand what they are
buying "a degree of instant shade for the
money", but often also those
seeking a real education to acquire false
administrative classes.
"Clients believe that a
University, but no, it's not" the report mentions
Jamshaid Yasir, a special quality
control consultant that GRIDS in October. '
This is money '.
Fake academic GRIDS virtual
space ' hug at least 370 these websites that
sell fake titles online and to gather millions of
dollars annually, according to the report of the New York Times.
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