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March 26, 2025 28 mins
Ian, Jane, Adam and Andy discuss the AI journalists coming to a paper near you, plus the rash of dodgy qualifications currently springing up in British universities. 

EYE TV: watch our forthcoming live Page 94 show from the comfort of your screen: https://www.cambridgeliteraryfestival.com/events/private-eye-podcast-live-helen-lewis-ian-hislop-andrew-hunter-andrew-murray/
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Episode Transcript

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Maisie (00:00):
Page 94, the Private Eye Podcast

Andrew (00:03):
Hello and welcome to another episode of Page 94.
My name's Andrew Hunter Murray, and I'mhere at the Private Eye office with Adam
MacQueen, Jane McKenzie and Ian Hislop.
We're here to discusseverything, not everything.
Three things that have happenedin the news since the last issue
of the magazine was published.
and we have a little bit of parishbusiness just before we start.
Finally we're going electric.
we're doing a live show at theCambridge Literature Festival, and

(00:26):
it's gonna be on the 26th of April.
sorry to let you all know about thisnow because it's sold out in the room,
but you can buy a streaming ticket ifyou like listening to this podcast.
But you think it needs to be more visual.
I need the, I need their faces.
now's a perfect opportunity to do it
if you as a way to lose listeners forthey see what we actually look like.
Disappointment.
You're absolutely right.

(00:46):
So if you want to, if you want tobuy a streaming ticket to see the
thing happening, then you can go
to private-eye.co.uk/podlive and you'll
be able to get one there.
It'll redirect you to the Cambridgeliterature festival website and the
other thing we need to know before westart the episode, for that episode,
for the live, what should we call it?
This live, it feels likeit needs a big title.

Ian (01:08):
it's an incredible development in technology.
We, move from doing this thing that'srecorded on the wireless somehow
and put out to doing it in a room a
bit like theatre.
So advance
is again, but it's recorded on a wax cylinder sent

Andrew (01:22):
out to all of our subscribers
if you'd like to ask us a questionthat we will read out and then
answer in that room as part ofthat show, then we would love that.
And you can email themto podcast@private.co uk.
Parish business ends.
let's, go straight totopic number one this week.
As we've all ascertained, we'revery, technically proficient ai.

(01:43):
Adam, various newspapers havebeen making various announcements
about how the future's bright.
The future's

Adam (01:48):
AI.
Yes, they have indeed.
Yeah.
And some of them not makingannouncements when they should
have been possibly as well.
So we've written in the last couple ofissues of street shame about The Guardian
who have done a big deal with, open ai,which is probably the most famous of the
AI firms as the one that behind Chat GPT.
and they have not only handed over inreturn for some cash, access to their
archive of stuff, which actually iswhat a lot of newspapers are doing.

(02:12):
they're not alone in doing this,making their online archives available
for price to train AI models on.
So other people who are doing similarthings, include the Associated
Press, Reuters, DMG Media, whoare behind the Daily Mail titles.
And the, I, the ft have done it.
NewsCorp, we've done a deal withit with an AI provider as well.
Now this isn't necessarily abad thing 'cause this is about

(02:33):
training artificial intelligence.
Models.
So actually training them onreasonably reliable stuff.
you won't necessarily say that, all thosenewspaper titles I've just quoted, but
it's better than just sending them outwilly-nilly to, to steal stuff and crawl
all over the internet and take stufffrom whatever sites the AI models might
fancy without any sort of judgment on it.
So this is quite a good deal if I wantto write an article in the style of

Andrew (02:54):
Owen Jones.
And I always do.

Adam (02:58):
This will make it easier for me to do that.
thankfully you have access to, an AI modelof some of the nation's best ISTs who are
quite good at doing this sort of thing.
So you probably don'tneed a bot to do that.
But, but yeah, that isone part of the deal.
Now, the other part of the deal,which, guardian staff did not find
out about until a press release wentout announcing it was, also with,
OpenAI, the Guardian will be developingnew products, features and tools.

(03:22):
Now that's caused quitea lot more consternation.

Ian (03:25):
That's not quite the, holier than thou version of we train
them on a proper, reliable model.
Is it?
No, that

Adam (03:31):
sounds a lot more like we get them to do things that, that, that
could replace journalists with, whichI think has caused quite a lot of,
understandable worry and paranoia.
we've talked before on this podcastabout how the NUJ, the National Union
of Journalists are extremely powerfulat The Guardian, and they're already
involved in negotiations over the use ofor possible use of ai and trying to, sort
out a policy with Guardian management,which essentially from the journalist

(03:53):
point, if we would be, don't bring in ai.
We don't want it.
No.
there was consternation also, you'llremember the Guardian staff went on strike
back in December a couple of times overthe, sale of the observer to tor us.
and at that point there was a lot ofconcern that, the kind of skeleton
management staff who were left to putout the paper for a couple of days were
using AI models to come up with headlines.

(04:15):
there's a lot of disgruntlement at theGuardian generally, but particularly
over this kind of thing now since,the last issue of the eye came out,
the Independent, remember them.
Online only, newspaper.
Yep.
Yep.
Owned by Yev friend of the podcast.
it's announced that it will be launchingsomething called Bulletin, which will
be like the independent but shorter.
AI summaries of stories from theindependent for time poor people,

(04:39):
who are just too poor in time toread an entire story and need to
have a robot do it first for them.
Instead.
Now they have assured their journalistsand readers that, everything that's
put out in bulletin will be reviewedand checked by human beings.
but they've also said that it's gonnago out with the original bylines on
it, which, if I was an independentjournalist, I think I'd be campaigns, have
my byline taken off something that hadbeen rewritten by a robot and put out,

Ian (05:01):
and it has to be rewritten by a robot and then checked by a human being,
how about a human being writing it?

Adam (05:08):
Yeah, you could call 'em something like Subeditors, those archaic job
titles of people we used to have on,on Fleet Street back in the old days.

Ian (05:16):
What.
Justification does any organizationput forward, and I need to know this
for when I sack the three of you.
what justification is there apartfrom just getting rid of journalists?

Adam (05:28):
a lot of it is to do with the fact that it's just the big
new thing and it's very exciting.
you hear Chris Stama talking about ai.
he obviously thinks it's the future.
Rachel Reeves has been talking aboutincreasing efficiency in the, public
sector and in the civil service byusing AI for all sorts of things.
he, does, you run into animmediate problem, which is the
independent have already identified.
you also do have to have somehumans looking over this stuff

(05:49):
to make sure it's not introducingmistakes, which is the experience of.
The use of AI in, in journalism already.
one of the companies that's been usingit for a while is, reach PLC, who are
that publishing, BMO, who published theDaily Express Day Star, the Daily Mirror,
and, over a hundred local papers as well.
and they have tool called, andthis is a nice historic reference.

(06:10):
It's called Guten After Gutenberg.
You remember the inventor of theprinting press who made the, the mass
media possible back in, where was it?
Very nice.
15th century.
16th century.
I had a lot

Ian (06:19):
of scribes, redundant

Adam (06:22):
all of those monks suddenly not having to illuminate manuscripts.
Yeah, they were probablyup in arms as well.
but they've been using it a lot.
and, that's something that essentially.
Rips, pieces of copy that have beenwritten for one reach outlet and can
republish them across a lot of other ones.
So giving them in theory, a sort of, anew geographical nosing on it that, it's
a story about something that's happeningin Liverpool, but you resell it to people

(06:44):
in Birmingham, or things like that.
But the problem, I've heard from peoplewithin reach with that is that it has
a tendency to work like a thesaurus.
And you can't just pluck wordsfrom a thesaurus without some human
involvement, you, you, need tomake sure they are the appropriate
word, not the inappropriate word.
So it will tend to introduce, one ofthe things I've had cited, and this is

(07:05):
anecdotal, is the, It can't quite tellthe difference between category B drugs
and category A drugs, which is quiteimportant in court reports of people who
are being charged with selling drugs.
and even the on occasion, and Ihave no idea whether these actually
made it too publication or not,or whether they were spotted.
it was introduced the names ofcompletely erroneous crown courts
and things, quite important details.

(07:26):
It just, it muddles up in the waythat, are not entirely trained
and still quite experimentaltechnology might be expected to.

Andrew (07:33):
There was something about a Boulder Rising software that had taken the
name of the, Enola gay, the us, the planethat was used to drop the atomic problems
and renamed it the Enola homosexual.

Adam (07:43):
That was it is.
What it reminded me of is actually,I remember Jane, you writing these
stories years ago about when, spamfilters first came in their, they're
untested and, not entirely reliable form.
And, I remember you did a story aboutthe Horneman Museum in South London.
Yes.

Jane (07:59):
Yes.
any organization that had a, a rude wordanywhere in its, title was, was being
affected such as Scunthorpe Town council.
Yep.

Ian (08:11):
are we assuming that AI will sort all this out and that within a year or
five minutes or whatever the timescale iswith ai, that it will be perfect and it
will essentially no longer need humans?
So the choice will be, do wewant humans to do anything?
Is that the dilemma?
I think that's

Adam (08:29):
the fear, certainly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
these things do get better.
That's that, that, that, is aproblem of 15 years ago, isn't it?
The one we gave the example thereof spam filters, they're still not
entirely reliable, but these things do.
And I'm just gonna drop in the wordalgorithm here as I understand one here.
But they do, learn things and theydo get better at these things.
And in that sense, making, reasonablyreliable newspaper archives that

(08:50):
have some sort of authority to themavailable for the training models
rather than, as I say, just thesort of nonsense that churn that's
turned out on various dodgy websites.
A very good story in the, latestedition of the Eye, which I thought
was really interesting, which is about,Russian use of AI for propaganda.
And the idea that actually because ofthe way that these models train now,

(09:11):
you don't even need to get it out thereand read by lots and lots of people.
You can just, through very cleversearch engine optimization and kind
of, bumping up your fake news websites,persuade the bots that they are reliable
and then the bots crawl all over themand the stuff doesn't get read on
your, dodgy initial website, but itthen turns up in, in the AI assisted
results on Google, as reliable stuff.

(09:33):
So actually, the move towardsnewspapers doing deals.
In order to have reliable informationout there that these things are training
on probably is quite a good one.

Ian (09:41):
that is better than, the Russians training the bots.
Yes.
That is a better bet.

Adam (09:45):
That's essentially it.
If they're crawling all over, othercountries guardian stories and Ft
stories that probably is better than themcrawling all over dodgy Russian websites.
Yeah,

Jane (09:53):
we long had the issue of circular confirmation where something
would be in a newspaper article andtherefore become part of the footnotes
of Wikipedia and then be referencedby a newspaper article and then be
referenced in the footnotes on Wikipedia.
And the source became itsown source repeatedly.
Yeah.

Adam (10:11):
Yes.
It was one of my proudestboasts in journalism.
It still is that I got therules of Wikipedia changed.
'cause we pointed this out.
Oh, this is about 20 years ago now,and I was contacted by a slightly
shamefaced editor from Wikipediawho said, okay, alright, yes,
no, you've made us look silly.
Now we're gonna change these rules.
We're gonna look at change.

Ian (10:27):
But is there likelihood of the rules changing that a bot has to be checked?
a friend in journalism pointedme to a, an advertisement for
a reporter, one year contract.
And the job was to writepieces in order to train ai.
That's literally, would youlike to dig your own grave?
and then fill it in, bringyour own spade, isn't it?
And, I can see the argument.

(10:49):
It's helpful to have a properreporter training it, but you're
just wiping yourself out, aren't you?
I think

Andrew (10:55):
what worries me is the idea that it's going to, it's going to go the way of
the supermarket till where you will haveone person overseeing a load of tills.
and they'll come over and helpyou out if there's a problem.
But fundamentally, shoplifting has goneup a lot since that has been introduced.
it is brought its own problems with it.
And then, I can see there might be acase for some of the, sort of the most

(11:15):
rudimentary reporting, which almostprogrammatic language, like I'm thinking
weather reports, things like this.
Yeah.
maybe not needing, afull human involvement.
But then again, the question is wherethat line No, we've gotta rebalance,

Ian (11:29):
we've got four reporters here saying that, the case against AI is pretty much
conclusive and that we don't need it.
Yeah,

Jane (11:37):
out outside of journalism, we've seen issues where AI systems entrench
biases, like when it was making,probation decisions and it's basic, its
decisions on past probation decisions.
but it just every iteration around thesystem, it got a bit more racist because
there'd been some initial racism inthe way that those decisions were made.

(12:01):
but every time you ran an ai, itdeepened that and worsened the problem.
So it wasn't making unbiased decisions,it was taking the human bias and
multiplying it every time it ran.

Ian (12:14):
And that presumably is the effect.
If you have state agentsinvolved in ai, they put.
What they want to hear into ai,the Russians, the Chinese, whoever.
and then that deepens.

Jane (12:26):
Yeah.
Every time it comes acrossit, it confirms it to itself.
So it just comes around the nexttime and tells itself that was
definitely right the last time.
That

Andrew (12:34):
is identical to the Wikipedia problem that you identified.
But there were various people whowould ring up and, or that would
contact Wikipedia and change their ownbirthday if they were a public figure.
And Wikipedia had got it wrong.
And someone said, yeah, but I've gota copy of the paper here that, that
says it's the 12th of August, so sorry.
Yeah.
No, it is true.
Now.
That absolutely is sothat's not been sought.
But the government does have an AI bill,which is planning as far as I can tell, to

(12:55):
completely open the doors to all of thisstuff legitimize the large scale use of,
I would think of copyrighted texts too.

Adam (13:01):
it may be too late for this because the other thing that's
emerged since the last issue in theAtlantic, the other paper, which
our esteemed and absent colleagueHelen Lewis works for never heard
of, was that, mark Zuckerberg's meta.
Have simply gone ahead and stolena load of copyrighted materials,
books, which they've used totrain their own ai I ai models on.
it's, it probably, and I shouldsay for the benefit of the private

(13:24):
eye lawyer who will be lookingover this before it goes out.
It's not quite, he's a robotaccurate to don't worry about him.
Yeah, we could look at getting,some AI from that, that would
save us some money, wouldn't it?
No.
For the benefit of the lawyer, I'm notaccusing, mark Zuckerberg thi being
a thief, he's actually, receivingstolen goods because this is an
entire library called Lib Gen, whichis just made up of pirated books.

(13:46):
millions and millions of them.
And, the, Atlantic fan memos withinMeta, which simply said that it looked
like it would be, Unreasonably expensiveto actually pay any of the authors
of these books to, trade to, for theuse of their work to train AI on.
So they simply lifted this entirealready illegal library lib gen,
and they've stolen, all of my books.
I checked they've stolen all ofyours as well, Andy, get out.

(14:09):
They have, they've stolen the privateannual that's in there as well.
Now this is serious.
They've also stolen an awfullot of your other books.
Ian, which I discovered wereall about the Catholic liturgy.
And then I looked at the publication dateson them and they were all from the 1950s.
So I didn't all

Andrew (14:23):
theologian relative.

Adam (14:24):
That was my big discovery.
What's your question,

Andrew (14:26):
Adam?
That sounds absolutely bang on.
Look, I was younger then.

Adam (14:32):
I did.
I quite seriously.
But wanted to check is just beingstolen and that was also what
the newspapers were very big on.
You remember last month?
the front pages right across all of thenational papers, except I think the FT and
all of the local papers as well saying,copyright law is there for a reason.
the writers and creators and artistsor anyone just should not have their
work ripped off by very, rich techcompanies, in order to train things that

(14:56):
eventually are gonna put us all at jobs.
Anyway.

Andrew (14:59):
That's very disappointing to hear that, that, our books were all on there.

Ian (15:03):
it's never the most sympathetic spectacle I know no
people complaining about somethingbecause it's put them out of work.
the poor old Luddites, people didn'tlike them much and they don't like
it much when we point this out, but.
It is amazing.
Wide scale theft.
Yes.
And when the Chinese, deep seekappeared, and then all the tech bros

(15:24):
said, you've stolen our material.
It did make us all laugh.
Oh yeah.
Because it's all Presto as we say now.

. Adam (15:31):
Do you want some good news?
Yeah.

, Adam (15:32):
because so little of private eyes material is online.
The bots cannot train themselves on it.
They have not got a clue.
So I asked Preemptively thinking of myown career chat, GPT last week, write a
story about the guardian in the style ofprivate eyes, street of shame section.
It's got a headline on it.
The Guardian's Guardian Angel, AStreet of Shame Exclusive, which

(15:52):
as is how we start off sounds.
Hang on.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm embarrassed already.
Here's your intro.
In the ever bustling streetsof Lefty v, home of the Wokes,
the guardian stands tall as abastion of progressive journalism.
Or so it likes to think, but recentlyit seems that the paper's reputation
is slipping faster than an unpaidintern's ability to secure a byline.

(16:14):
That's good stuff.
What do you reckon, Ian?
Straight in with this one.

Ian (16:17):
that lefty V The most worrying thing about this, I have to say, is

Adam (16:20):
that it was based on a complete, bit of fiction because the story it pitched
to me was, about the guardian introducinga premium rate, paywall on their website,
which is something that simply has nothappened So not only did it write it
in the wrong style, it's just makingfacts up as well, which is sort limey

Andrew (16:39):
Okay.
We come now to our second story this week.
Jane, the last edition of the SundayTimes had as its front page, very
exclusive investigation, a big story.
About fraud, in student loans.

Jane (16:52):
It did.

Andrew (16:53):
Yeah.
And this was, I'm sure, news to you.

Jane (16:56):
Wow.
It was a little bit familiar, really.
Okay.
The story is that, a lot ofuniversities, franchise out some of
their courses to, other providers.
These are private colleges andbusiness schools and things like that.
And, turns out, a lot of them are justrunning, scams to get student loans,

(17:20):
not necessarily providing anything likethe courses that, they're advertising.

Andrew (17:25):
talk me through how the, where the student loan goes
and who's benefiting from it.
Yeah.

Jane (17:29):
a, student loan, hard as it is for, actual real students to,
to pay back in, be a significantfinancial, drain for, young people.
But, it is, a good loan rate if youwere just trying to finance things
especially if you're never planningto pay it back and write it off and

(17:51):
the student loan company's not gonnabe able to pursue you because perhaps
you've taken it to another country.
then, getting a student loan is, isa great way to get some money fast.

Andrew (18:00):
is it the fault of the institutions which are taking on these
students who are perhaps less qualifiedor, not willing to pay back the loan?
Or is it the fault of the peoplewho the students quote unquote
students who are applying?

Jane (18:12):
I
think there's some blame to spread around.
Certainly actual fraudstersare the first kind of line.
Yeah.
however, there's very long beenan issue with universities not
keeping a close in a fight.
On their franchised providers.
and this goes back years in terms ofprivate, I writing about the issue
with franchise providers long beforethe, fraud issue specifically came up.

(18:36):
We've talked about some of the terriblepseudoscience quackery courses that
they were actually a sort of allowingto be accredited under their names.
We had things like, animal chiropracticand, homeopathy degrees being
signed off by Bay Universities.
But the courses were being run bythese separate providers, and the

(18:58):
universities just tick the books.
Yes, you can have a degreewith our crest on it.
a lot of work was done on,reducing the amount of that.
There's still some of it out there, and

Andrew (19:08):
that's the way of the university getting some money in because they
don't have to run the course in animalhomeopathy or whatever it might be,

Jane (19:13):
but they still get some, tuition money for that.

Ian (19:17):
Okay.
I would say this is yet another wokelefty, attack on the very fine business
of outsourcing, which privatizeseems to write about endlessly.
it just doesn't work very well.
In the education field, does it

Jane (19:33):
well?
no.
so again, not new that, courseshave, turned out to be fraudulent.
a few years back, Ofsted was, lookingat, one in, further education, a college,
and discovered that many of the studentsthat were registered for this college
not only weren't doing the course,but hadn't even heard of the college.

(19:54):
Wow.
They were just, odd list of names stuckon a register so that they could claim
more money from the funding bodies.

Ian (20:02):
does the money go to the outsourced provider?
Does it go to the student themselves?
How does it work?

Jane (20:09):
And this is a student loan fraud, not tuition fee.
there's, there's whole other issuesgoing on with where the tuition fees
go and and universities have differentdeals with different providers, In
terms of whether they're having apartnership or a franchise deal.
But in terms of the student loan fraud,that's the student's relationship

(20:30):
with the student loans company.
But if you are doing organized crime,then you can set up a course and get a
organized group of people to lend theirnames to claiming lots and lots of loans.
Yeah.
and this is where we come back tothe, Sunday time story is, not news

(20:52):
to private eye as just over a yearago we wrote about this happening,
the University of Northampton, andone of its franchise providers.
they found that.
600 students had effectivelysubmitted the same coursework.
Oh, I, when that happens,

(21:12):
at which point they, they asked some questions, oh, are these students real?
Yeah.
Are they attending the course?
what's going on there?
at this point reported themselves.
at least they found out it's, so

Andrew (21:27):
what Northampton University, Northampton

Jane (21:29):
reported themselves to the office of students So this is how we found
about it, because they had to put a linein their annual report saying that they
were going to have to pay, 6.1 millionpounds back in terms of tuition fees.
Wow.
So it was clearly, and you

Ian (21:45):
spotted this with your eagle eye, 6 million pounds.
That's being slightly unlikely.

Jane (21:51):
it was, what was helpfully flagged up was that the National
Audit Office did a report on issueswith the student loans company.
And although they anonymized it,they did make a note that one
university had, ah, had an issuewhere they'd spotted a 6.1 million.
Fraud, which made it a lot easier to lookfor because they gave the exact amount

(22:13):
to look for in the university accounts.

Andrew (22:16):
I'm just imagining whoever had the job of marking all that coursework.
'cause they would've had anunbelievably easy time of it.
Very good.
This is similar.
And so that was a franchised thingat the University of Northampton.
Yeah.
that wasn't in-house, that was exterior.
What is to stop the fourof us doing this now?
Let's say the four of us approachedthe University of Buckingham or
wherever, just using them as an example.

(22:37):
And we say, look, we've got thisgreat course in, should we say
investigative journalism, shouldwe say sat, satirical journalism.
Satirical journalism.
Satirical journalism.
That sounds good.
Invite a lot of studentsto take part in this.
How do, how does that relationship work?
Do we know this soundslike a trip to Romania?
that's the thing, isn't it?
A lot of it is, Romanianbased or the recent fraud.

(22:58):
S in terms

Jane (22:59):
of money having left the country, that does appear to be
where, significant amounts set off to.
Yes.
Okay.

Ian (23:05):
so the, students from an unknown.
Possibly EU country.
Yeah.
Come over.
They take out the loan at the endof it, someone says, you don't
appear to have attended any courses.
And they say, oh, I was workingfrom home and you can pick it up.
And they sent me the texts.
and presumably quite difficult to prove.

Jane (23:24):
And in the meantime, they've, got a loan, which they possibly have
no intention of paying back, or, evenif they did, if they've had a loan at
extremely beneficial rates compared toa bank loan, they haven't actually been
a student for that would still be fraud.
But in the case of theseparticular, what sort of, scams?
Yeah.
These are just find a list ofpeople who are willing to have

(23:46):
their names put on a, list.

Ian (23:48):
It seems an incredibly obvious scam in higher education.
I'm not saying that.
they're worse at spotting it.
But shouldn't it have beendetected a bit earlier?

Jane (23:59):
universities can be very, proud of their global reach and their kind of their
London campus and, by being more thanjust University of Muggles v then they now
have courses all over the place and theirname is getting out there and they're,

Adam (24:17):
and a lot of universities we should say as well, are in pretty dire financial
straits at the moment, aren't they?
So they do need to be consideringways of getting money in to keep
the doors open at all, don't they?

Jane (24:26):
they are getting some, income through these deals.
that's just

Andrew (24:30):
what I was going to ask you, Shane.
In terms of the scam, the, fourof us are gonna start running.
how are we gonna benefit fromthat financially, please?
The tuition fees.
we get the tuition fees.
They get the

Jane (24:39):
cheap loans.
We get the tuition fees.
Okay, great.
We don't provide anyteaching, so there's no costs.
we don't have the seats for it.
Yeah, that's fine.
Yeah.

Ian (24:47):
But there's so many times who, who did this piece quite well.
they, had some funny pictures ofthese sort of outsourced teaching
institutions that appeared to beabove a chip shop or a couple of
chairs, or a brass plaque somewhere.

Andrew (25:03):
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Studied Wizarding world.
University of American Hard can, yes,

Jane (25:07):
I think Eastern University of Carpets is, the classic,

Andrew (25:11):
isn't it?
He's working at the number one vapeshop in the whole of the country.
We're very depressed.
Yeah.

Ian (25:17):
If people say, oh, I'm not gonna pay the student loan back, is that because the
figures suggest that lots of people don't?

Jane (25:25):
Yeah.
genuine students oftenare not paying them back.
Obviously it depends on their, income.
And, a lot don't manage to, to earnenough to be paying, student loan
back, for a long time, if at all.
or they managed to lose people in thesystem that aren't gonna pay them back.

(25:46):
in particular, if you're just a,fraudulent name on a list, then
you're gonna be quite hard to findbecause, we don't know exactly
how accurate the informationthey're getting about people is.

Adam (25:57):
And this sort of thing looks less unusual 'cause all sorts of
universities are opening weirdcampuses overseas and things.
Anyway.
You've written a lot aboutthat haven't you, Jane?

Jane (26:04):
Absolutely.
universities are constantly tryingto extend their reach and build
their empires and open their,campuses in dubious regimes.
And, perhaps if you were just theuniversity in one city with sort of one
structure, you might be able to keepa better eye on your overall finances

(26:27):
and what you're putting your name to.

Ian (26:28):
You suggesting growth isn't always good, Jane?

Jane (26:32):
I think I am.
Yeah, I think growing inKazakhstan or, it might be worth
having a second think about.

Andrew (26:42):
so this has been.
Crack down on is going to becracked down on, as Ian asks, is it?
Yeah.

Jane (26:47):
It's going to be investigated.
Okay.
By the, the public sector fraudinvestigation body, although they,
very much knit around and ask thepeople at the National Audit Office
who did the investigation last year.
And a previous investigation in about2017 and a previous investigation in
about 2012, the, National Audit Office,I've been banging on about this for a

(27:08):
while, that it's, a massive risk with theway student loans work is that, you can.
Wander off with your fullstudent loan, and never pay it
back and not to do a course.

Adam (27:21):
And so this predates all of the Covid loans stuff that's still
being looked into, doesn't it?
This is, a very long running thingthat suddenly we had, Sunday Times
stories, unlike Private Island.
Ones came with the column fromBridget Phillips and the education
Secretary saying, it's time tocrack down on this sort of thing.
Yes.

Jane (27:37):
Yeah.
the government has recognizedit needs to crack down on it.
They've been running a consultation onhow to crack down on it since January.

Adam (27:45):
that's the answer.
Consultations all around.
They're trying to work it out.

Andrew (27:49):
Okay.
That's it for this episode of page 94.
Thank you so much to allof you for listening.
We'll be back again in afortnight with another one.
Just a reminder, if you want to send ina question for page 94 live, the Royal
Abbo, sorry, Cambridge Literary Festival,you just emailed podcast@privateny.co.uk.

(28:09):
thanks very much for listening.
Thanks to everyone for participating andthanks to rethink Audio for producing.
Bye for now.
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