“It feels so jury-rigged together,” Hayes says. “The website looked like it was built in 2008” At the end, he typed his name again Examity would store a biometric template of his keystrokes. To create his account, Hayes was required to upload a picture of his photo ID to Examity’s website and provide his full name, email, and phone number - pretty banal stuff. Hayes learned about it via an item on the class syllabus, released shortly before the semester began, that read “Examity Directions.” The syllabus instructed Hayes and his classmates to sign up for Examity, an online test-proctoring service. When he’d signed up for an online class in Russian cinema history, he’d had no idea it meant being surveilled over video chat by someone on the other side of the world. “Correct,” said Jackson Hayes, from his cinder-block dorm room at the University of Arizona. Please confirm your name is Jackson and that you’re about to take your 11:30PM exam.” “My name is Sharath and I will be your proctor today. Behind him was white plastic peppered with pictures of a padlock. He wore a black headset and a blue lanyard around his neck. The stranger on the Zoom call appeared to be sitting in a tent.