Layla closed the laptop and called the one person she knew would understand: Fatima, a former student of hers from a 2010 AMIDEAST program in Tunis. Fatima was now a software engineer at a major tech firm in Berlin. She also, Layla had recently discovered, was the anonymous architect of the New Souk’s encryption protocol.
Every night, between midnight and 4 AM, the domain’s server quietly became a relay. A student in Homs could open the official AMIDEAST portal, click “Practice Exam,” and instead receive a live, proctored simulation using real, stolen questions. The answers were not provided—the New Souk believed in honest cheating , they called it “leveling the field.” The student would take the test, and the system would then submit their genuine, low score to a real university’s admissions office alongside a fabricated high score from a ghost candidate. The university would see both. The choice was theirs: accept the real student with empathy, or the ghost with a lie. amideastonline.org
Over the next seventy-two hours, she learned the truth through a labyrinth of WhatsApp forwards and a single, terrified phone call from a librarian in Sana’a, Yemen. A shadowy group calling themselves The New Souk had hacked into the national examination infrastructure of a country that no longer had a functioning government. They had stolen the answer keys to every standardized test—TOEFL, IELTS, GMAT, GRE—that had been administered in the region for the past six years. And instead of selling them on the dark web, they had done something absurd. Layla closed the laptop and called the one