Our policy
Academic Integrity Policy
GeeksProgramming is a learning service. The code we deliver is a worked reference: original, explained, and yours to learn from. How you use it is governed by your institution's academic-integrity policy, and we build the service so the honest path is the easy path.
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Where we draw the line
What we refuse, every time, no exceptions
Five categories of request are off the table. We decline these every time, whoever asks and whatever the deadline.
Exam or quiz taking
We do not sit a live, timed, online, or proctored exam, test, or quiz on your behalf, under any circumstance.
Cheating in a proctored or graded assessment
We will not help you cheat during a proctored session or a graded assessment while it is in progress. That includes real-time answers, hidden devices, or remote control of any kind.
Grade manipulation
We do not access, alter, or influence a grade, transcript, or grading system on your behalf.
Impersonation
We never log in as you, anywhere: not to a learning portal, a testing platform, an email account, or any other system.
Anything illegal
If a request breaks the law in any jurisdiction, we decline it. No exceptions, no workarounds.
How the process helps
A model built so the honest path is the easy path
Every deliverable ships with a walkthrough. You get a plain-English explanation of how the code works, not just a finished file, and 1:1 sessions are available if you want to work through it live with the expert who wrote it.
Payment runs on the 50/50 milestone model: you pay 50% to start and see the work before you pay the remaining 50%. You review and understand the deliverable before it is final, not after.
Every solution is written from scratch for your brief and checked with industry-standard similarity tools, such as Turnitin, SafeAssign, MOSS, and JPlag, before delivery. If your school runs its own check through a university portal, we can help you verify the result before you submit.
Practical guidance
Reference material vs. blind submission
Using the delivered code as a reference or a study aid, reading it, running it, rewriting parts of it in your own words, sits on the honest side of the line for most institutions. Submitting it exactly as delivered, without disclosure your school requires, is a different decision, and one that carries academic risk if your institution does not allow it.
Cite or disclose outside help according to your institution's rules. Some courses require a citation for any external resource, tutor, or reference; others do not. Check your syllabus or ask your instructor when you are not sure.
If your institution forbids outside help of any kind, even tutoring or reference material, that policy governs. Nothing on this page overrides your school's rules.
FAQ
Common questions about academic integrity
Will you take my online exam?
No. We do not sit a live, timed, online, or proctored exam, test, or quiz for you, and we never log in as you. See the refusal list above: this is a firm line, not a judgment call made case by case.
Is using your service cheating?
That depends on your institution's policy and how you use the work. The code we deliver is a worked reference, original and explained, meant for you to study, run, and learn from. Using it as a study aid and then writing your own submission is the honest-use path. Submitting our work blind, without disclosure your institution requires, is a decision that sits on you, and one your school's policy governs. When in doubt, ask your instructor before you submit anything.
Is the code original?
Yes. Every deliverable is written from scratch for your brief and checked with industry-standard similarity tools before delivery. If your school runs its own originality check through a university portal, we can help you verify the result before you submit.
What if my school forbids outside help entirely?
Then that policy governs, and it overrides anything on this page. Some institutions do not allow outside help of any kind, even tutoring or reference material. Check your course syllabus and your school's academic-integrity policy first, and when it says no outside help, that is the rule to follow.
Get help built for learning, not shortcuts
Send your brief and talk to an expert who explains the work, not one who takes it off your hands entirely.