Nah, rot13 helps avoid casual spoilers but it doesn’t count as not publishing the answers.
You could probably devise a code that requires non-trivial cryptanalysis and encrypt any discussion of the answers using that, and not publish the solution to the encryption. Then someone else can post here asking how to crack it, and so on ad nauseam.
A little bird tells me that decompiling the flash app reveals the answers. So by the non-trivial cryptanalysis definition they’ve published the answers themselves.
My point was that it wouldn’t “sabotage the test for others”, as you put it, because they wouldn’t accidentally read the answers and invalidate their test results. Did I misinterpret your position?
I think the intention of not publishing the answers at all (rather than putting the answers behind a link saying “Spoilers—do not click if you don’t want to know the answers”) was that they do not want the answers published.
So, I think it would be rude to do so, that’s all.
If you don’t see them before you take the test, I fail to see why anyone should care. If someone wants to know the answers—I know I would—why should anyone want to stop them?
Rot-13 would prevent unintentional cheating, and I can’t see the point of intentional cheating, as anything you could achieve through that you could achieve by photoshopping the results page.
Nah, rot13 helps avoid casual spoilers but it doesn’t count as not publishing the answers.
You could probably devise a code that requires non-trivial cryptanalysis and encrypt any discussion of the answers using that, and not publish the solution to the encryption. Then someone else can post here asking how to crack it, and so on ad nauseam.
A little bird tells me that decompiling the flash app reveals the answers. So by the non-trivial cryptanalysis definition they’ve published the answers themselves.
My point was that it wouldn’t “sabotage the test for others”, as you put it, because they wouldn’t accidentally read the answers and invalidate their test results. Did I misinterpret your position?
I think the intention of not publishing the answers at all (rather than putting the answers behind a link saying “Spoilers—do not click if you don’t want to know the answers”) was that they do not want the answers published.
So, I think it would be rude to do so, that’s all.
If you don’t see them before you take the test, I fail to see why anyone should care. If someone wants to know the answers—I know I would—why should anyone want to stop them?
Rot-13 would prevent unintentional cheating, and I can’t see the point of intentional cheating, as anything you could achieve through that you could achieve by photoshopping the results page.