This Akshay Malviya case from Indore is honestly quite disturbing because it shows how exam pressure and AI misuse are now mixing in very messy way . A first-year law student allegedly selling fake NEET question papers to medical aspirants is not small thing ah.
As per reports,Akshay Malviya was apprehended for selling fake NEET question papers which were generated through artificial intelligence . And strange part is,these papers were reportedly being sold for just ₹50 to ₹100 .
He allegedly targeted students preparing for NEET,basically those looking for some advantage before exams . That itself says a lot about how desperate exam culture has become,and how easily some people can exploit that desperation.
Police say Malviya operated through Instagram account where he advertised his so-called services . He reportedly claimed he could provide NEET question papers ahead of examinations,but investigation found material was fake and created using AI tools,notably ChatGPT.
And tbh,this is where whole thing becomes even more uncomfortable . AI was not used for learning or practice here,but allegedly manipulated to create misleading content and sell it like leaked paper .
According to Crime Branch’s Special Investigation Team (SIT),around 20 to 22 students fell victim to this scheme . Payments were reportedly made through different online methods,which also shows how casually this fraud was running online.
Few things standing out clearly in this case:
- Fake NEET papers sold online — Akshay Malviya created and sold AI-generated papers .
- Charges filed — He faces charges under the IPC and IT Act .
- Investigation ongoing — Authorities are probing for additional accomplices.
The arrest was made late Saturday night after tip-off from Kota Police,who had already been monitoring Malviya's activities because of earlier NEET-related incident . So this was not some random one-time suspicion only.
Now police are trying to find out whether Malviya acted alone or if more people were part of this fraudulent operation . And honestly,that question matters because if one student could do this through Instagram and AI tools,then how many others may be trying same thing quietly…
At same time,this case also puts spotlight on bigger issue around AI in education . Technology can help students lot,but when it starts getting used for fake papers,exam scams and cheating dreams,then system has to ask some hard questions . How do you stop this without also hurting genuine learning…








