@pandeyambarish@fssaiindia@MoHFW_INDIA@JPNadda The job of the journalists isn't to speculate rubbish things and tagging the ministry of health to resolve it, instead just be humble and ask questions if you don't know simple things , you would easily get the answers🙏
Why are ticket prices for Hollywood movies priced absurdly high at Whitefield compared to other parts of the city !! If only there was max ticket price capping like other states in Karnataka !!
Built iLekka for iPhone to automatically track expenses from those SMS messages.
And it's private by design !
Do give it a try !
https://t.co/iJXu1nsb6N
Most of our spending is digital.
UPI. Cards. Online payments.
And banks already send SMS alerts for every transaction. So why do people still use manual expense trackers in iPhones?
CBSE Brand goes down the drain which is a national embarrassment only because people at the top only think about making money and have no idea about software industry standards !
This is an unbelievable piece of work by Sarthak and something that requires amplification.
Let me explain what he found, in simple terms.
Sarthak is a Class 12 student from the 2025-26 batch, one of the 17 lakh students whose answer sheets went through CBSE's new On-Screen Marking system.
He spent days reading through CBSE's evaluation tenders, scraped all 576 tenders CBSE has issued, and tracked how the rules changed across three versions of the same tender.
The core finding is that the company that won the contract to scan and grade 17 lakh students' answer sheets is Coempt Eduteck.
Coempt used to be called Globarena Technologies. Globarena was the company behind the 2019 Telangana intermediate exam disaster, where software failures led to 3.8 lakh students getting wrong or missing marks, and 23 students died by suicide.
A government committee found systemic failure and negligence. Six months later, Globarena rebranded to Coempt Eduteck.
So a company with that track record won a contract to handle 17 lakh CBSE students. Sarthak's investigation is about how the rules were rewritten to let that happen.
The tender was issued three times.
> First tender, February 2025. It existed, then disappeared from the public GeM portal. Sarthak scraped all 576 CBSE tenders and this one was missing from the archive entirely.
> Second tender, May 2025. Four companies applied including TCS and Coempt. All four failed the technical evaluation. Cancelled.
> Third tender, August 2025. Coempt won. Between the second and third tender, a series of rule changes happened, and every single one made it easier for Coempt to qualify.
Here is what changed, one by one.
01. The old rules disqualified any company with a history of abandoning work, failing to complete contracts, or financial weakness. The new rules deleted this clause entirely. Coempt's Telangana history stopped being a barrier.
02. The old rules disqualified any company that was "blacklisted earlier." The new rules changed this to "currently blacklisted." Because Globarena rebranded after Telangana, removing the word "earlier" effectively erased their past.
03. The rules required Rs 50 crore average turnover over three years. Coempt's exact average came to Rs 50.86 crore. They cleared the bar by less than 1%. Earlier, a smaller company had asked CBSE to lower the bar to Rs 30 crore for fairer competition. CBSE refused. So the bar was kept high enough to block small players, but sat exactly low enough for Coempt to scrape through.
04. Software maturity is measured on the CMMI scale, 1 to 5. The old rules required Level 5. The new rules dropped it to Level 3. Coempt is a Level 3 company.
05. The cooling-off period for engaging retired CBSE officials was cut from two years to one. This makes it easier to use recently retired insiders to influence the process.
06. The old rules required experience with large projects of at least 5 lakh students each. The new rules removed the student count and counted cumulative answer-book volume across small projects instead. Coempt has many small fragmented university contracts. This helped Coempt and hurt TCS.
07. The old rules required bidders to own their own data centre and disaster recovery centre on Indian soil. The new rules allowed third-party MeitY-empanelled cloud hosting. Coempt runs on AWS and Azure. This helped Coempt and hurt TCS, which owns its own data centres. It also means student data is no longer on sovereign, Indian infrastructure.
08. The old rules required the bidder to own or control the complete source code of its software. The new rules deleted this. Coempt's platform runs on Microsoft's proprietary IIS, which they don't own.
09. A last-minute corrigendum, issued right before bid submission, removed CBSE's own power to blacklist the firm if its software failed catastrophically. So even a Telangana-scale failure couldn't get Coempt banned from future government tenders.
10. The penalty structure shifted from punishing mistakes to punishing delays. The old rules fined the vendor for wrong scanning, merged pages, and unscanned books. The new rules dropped those and instead levied Rs 50,000 per day for delays. This incentivises rushed scanning over accurate scanning.
11. The old rules had a hard accuracy threshold, error rate not to exceed 0.5%. The new rules removed this number entirely.
12. The old rules specified proper book and robotics scanners. The new rules just say "sufficient scanners." The definition was vague enough that, as Sarthak notes, the scanning could be done with a phone on a stand.
13. On the security side, the contract required a VAPT (vulnerability and penetration test) certified by CERT-In before go-live, and a restricted beta phase before launch. The system clearly wasn't restricted, because the other researcher, Nisarga, was able to access it and find vulnerabilities four days before go-live. So the mandatory security audit appears to have been bypassed.
These are more than a dozen rule changes, all between the failed tender and the winning tender, all pushing in the same direction, all benefiting the one company with the worst track record in the field.
The security holes Nisarga found last week now have an explanation. The system was built by a vendor that was specifically allowed to skip the security certification, the source code ownership, the data sovereignty, and the quality thresholds the original rules demanded.
Following things need to happen immediately;
1. An immediate CAG audit of the tender process.
2. A parliamentary debate on the topic.
3. An independent investigation into
> Why the first tender vanished?
> Why the disqualification clauses were deleted?
> Why the turnover bar was held exactly where it was?
> Why the security level was dropped?
> Why the blacklisting power was removed at the last moment?
Sarthak, this is genuinely exceptional investigative work. Far better than most journalists with full resources ever manage. Take a bow. :)
The fact that I see these kinds of practises in my everyday work life and people rewarding the people who do this is frustrating ! When did stating the facts become uncool !
New video by @MKBHD and @Mrwhosetheboss explains how the tech companies exaggerate stuff and sometimes even make things up to look cool ! I just can't comprehend why is this kind of marketing still acceptable ??
https://t.co/WpuwcTXFMa
Why is it designed this way ? Why can't I get my receipt generated later ?? Transaction logs should be present atleast for a short period of time right ??!!
@OfficialBMRCL I needed the receipt for my card recharge which I forgot to ask while recharging and I moved out of the queue. I remembered within 2 mins and went back and asked the same but the person mentioned that it's only possible to generate immediately after recharge.
@ausurya1 There should always be a way to validate it. You just need to find a way. That's it! Try to check similar kind of ideas on how they would have validated it.
Why isn't there an app to automatically read the bank transaction sms and give a spent report on iOS ? I know that there are some restrictions on reading sms but isn't there any other work around for this ?? Just curious to know if even people are interested for this ??
@flyingfriend531@blrcitytraffic I don't know if making them pay fine for doing this, is a learning for them !! Just posted it here to understand what it takes for us to have a basic civic sense !!
No matter what kind of rules you set up, bollards you set up on the footpath, until people get common civic sense in their mind, we as a country can't improve !
@blrcitytraffic not sure how you can educate these kinds of people !!