Author Archives: F. E. Guerra-Pujol
The Chegg Conspiracy
Note: this blog post is the fifth in a multi-part series on “the law and ethics of Chegg.” I will be posting my Model Criminal Complaint against Chegg, Inc. and Chegg CEO Dan Rosensweig next week (most likely on Tuesday … Continue reading
PSA: our “leaders” are a disgrace
Originally posted on prior probability:
I am interrupting my moral and legal analysis of Chegg’s evil business model to ask, Where is the accountability? Why has no one in our government or military been fired for our defeat in Afghanistan…
Throwback Thursday: researchers cheat too
I am still in the process of writing up my Model Criminal Indictment against Chegg; in the meantime, here is a link to my 2015 paper “Legal Liability for Research Fraud.” (Also, check out the myriad instances of research fraud … Continue reading
PSA: our “leaders” are a disgrace
I am interrupting my moral and legal analysis of Chegg’s evil business model to ask, Where is the accountability? Why has no one in our government or military been fired for our defeat in Afghanistan and the ongoing disaster in … Continue reading
The case against Chegg in a nutshell
Note: this blog post is the fourth in a multi-part series on “the law and ethics of Chegg.” Thus far, we have seen how students use Chegg to cheat (see my 8.16 post “The Napster of cheating“), and we have … Continue reading
Chegg is evil: change my mind
Note: this blog post is the third in a multi-part series on “the law and ethics of Chegg.” Is Chegg evil? This is the question I posed to my students in the spring of 2021, when I discovered that many … Continue reading
Argument by analogy: Chegg is the Rick Singer of college cheating
Note: this blog post is the second in a multi-part series on “the law and ethics of Chegg.” Remember Rick Singer? He was the alleged mastermind of the now-infamous College Admissions Bribery Scandal. In summary, in March of 2019, federal … Continue reading
Joe Biden is our Neville Chamberlain
Although it was Trump people’s who negotiated the now-infamous withdrawal deal with representatives of the Taliban last year (see picture below, right), Joe Biden’s incompetent implementation of this illicit agreement, his continued prevarications (see here), and our pusillanimous surrender in … Continue reading
Monday map (Taliban takeover edition)
I am interrupting my series on “the law and ethics of Chegg,” which will resume on Tuesday morning, in order to let everyone know that the distance between the Arg (Presidential Palace), which is now under the Taliban’s control, and … Continue reading
Chegg: the Napster of cheating?
Note: this blog post is the first in a multi-part series on “the law and ethics of Chegg.” What is Chegg? I want to begin my series by describing what Chegg is and by explaining how college students use Chegg … Continue reading

