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California Regulator Seeks To Shut Down 'Learn To Code' Bootcamps

cultiv8 writes: "The Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education (BPPE), a unit in the California Department of Consumer Affairs charged with licensing and regulating postsecondary education in California, is arguing that 'learn to code' bootcamps fall under its jurisdiction and are subject to regulation. In mid-January, BPPE sent cease and desist letters to Hackbright Academy, Hack Reactor, App Academy, Zipfian Academy, and others. Unless they comply, these organizations face imminent closure and a hefty $50,000 fine. A BPPE spokesperson said these organizations have two weeks to start coming into compliance."

374 comments

  1. California by gd2shoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yep. This sounds like California.

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    1. Re:California by idobi · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

    2. Re:California by WPIDalamar · · Score: 2

      Hack Reactor claims 99% placement?

      If true, maybe this really is an innovative education environment that aggressive regulation should stay away from.

    3. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm kinda on the fence regarding this. I really think its a hindrance to innovation to force anyone trying to teach someone else something to be licensed. Is there a legal limit where you have to be licensed. Lets say I teach some kids to play the piano in my spare time, do I really have to be licensed. If I'm running a studio with multiple employees, I probably should.

    4. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      If you're charging $15k a head, and you're whining about the undue burden of a "hefty" $50k fine, then you have what, 10 clients?

    5. Re:California by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, if you are promising jobs that you can't actually guarantee, you don't need regulation, you need to be prosecuted for fraud. That simple.

    6. Re:California by alen · · Score: 3, Informative

      what is the small print

      unless its really 99% of their grads are hired for real software jobs which i don't believe they need to be truthful. every school that hypes a placement rate always has some small print that shows the 90% number is a small percentage of sampled students

    7. Re:California by killkillkill · · Score: 1

      If that is what they are promising and the statistics don't match there are plenty of laws about fair marketing and fraud that would open them up to well more than a $50,000 fine.

    8. Re:California by cultiv8 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course

      My spouse's employer recently paid that amount for a 2 day SAP course, and I'm pretty sure CA regulators are not going after the company providing the SAP course.

      promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google,"

      I do not see a promise or guarantee of employment anywhere in the article or in a brief search of their websites.

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    9. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or we need regulation so they can stop claiming 99% placement when its more like 9%

    10. Re:California by pesho · · Score: 5, Informative

      The regulation is hardly aggressive. According to the regulators for now all the companies need to show is a good faith effort to come in compliance. The article headline is obviously misleading.

    11. Re:California by jimbolauski · · Score: 1

      If they truly are promising employment upon completion of their course then the students have grounds for a refund if they fail to be employed. What is the purpose of this government body? To ensure students are not ripped off? California all ready has a consumer protections enforced by the Department of Justice, this is just another bureaucratic hurdle imposed by California that will stifle smaller companies while protecting established companies and universities from competition.

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    12. Re:California by NewWorldDan · · Score: 0

      I generally agree that regulation should be minimal in any educational environment, but how do you differentiate?

    13. Re:California by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      Yeah, If the course was free (did not RTFA) I would argue that cali can go fuck off, but if they are charging and making promises, there should be some kind of regulation.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    14. Re: California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Regulation can prevent harm. Litigation is expensive, time consuming, and a crap shoot with loaded dice since the perpetrator has much deeper pockets. Also see tort reform which gutted your only recourse. Deregulation and tort reform are done for the wealthy to give them impunity.

    15. Re:California by khallow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      I'm echoing what's already been said here. But regulation and compliance already exists. Fraud didn't become legal just because. If fraud and similar crimes are not being prosecuted, then it is an enforcement problem not a lack of regulation problem.

    16. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see plenty of posts at 2 that are obviously overrated. It's easy for a dumb-ass post to get hiked up to 5 before its dumb-assedness gets explained. At that point, even a score of 1 is overrated.

    17. Re:California by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 2

      Hack Reactor claims 99% placement?

      I don't see how. Nowhere near 99% of the students taking the class would ever be qualified to work in the field.

    18. Re:California by porges · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'd raise your "misleading" to "bullshit", actually. The article makes it perfectly clear, the summary and headline are garbage.

    19. Re:California by hawguy · · Score: 1

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course

      My spouse's employer recently paid that amount for a 2 day SAP course, and I'm pretty sure CA regulators are not going after the company providing the SAP course.

      promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google,"

      I do not see a promise or guarantee of employment anywhere in the article or in a brief search of their websites.

      SAP courses tend to be B2B, which is entirely different than consumer oriented courses.

      These bootcamps do make some claims that deserve greater scrutiny:

      "12-weeks + From beginner to software engineer + San Francisco, CA"

      "That said, the skills you pick up here are valuable around the world. Graduates walk out the door with an increasingly impressive array of project work that would impress employers in any country."

      "Twelve weeks later, you’ll follow the footsteps of our trailblazing alumni, taking the methodologies and best practices you perfected at our coding bootcamp to your next job"

      Would anyone hire any of these graduates for a software engineering position? I don't think I would unless they had some real world work experience to back it up. It sounds like these short programs are producing coders, not engineers. There's a big difference between the two.

    20. Re: California by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2

      Wouldn't false advertising or fraud laws already cover that?

    21. Re:California by mlw4428 · · Score: 0

      How does one know if it's true? They don't report to any regulating body. There is no one that can fact check their claims unless the companies willingly releases the data.

    22. Re:California by Entropius · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This doesn't require any more regulation.

      Deceptive advertising is fraud. Don't "regulate" -- prosecute them for fraud if they're committing fraud. If they're not, then leave them the hell alone.

    23. Re:California by jythie · · Score: 1, Informative

      Well, that is the 65,000$ question, isn't it? Unless one is in one of the extreme camps, regulation is a constant balancing act that requires constant examination to determine if it is useful or unnecessary burden.

      So the devil will be in the details, with it not being all that clear what this particular case represents. It could be an overreach hurting a useful new service, or it could be simply helping said service mature while stemming ways they could go very wrong.

    24. Re:California by jythie · · Score: 1

      In general, regulation of higher education is how one determines if an entity is committing fraud or not. "Fraud" is not as simple as 'someone lies', it usually involves having a regulated baseline regarding what is expected in various industries and deviating from that baseline is used to determine if someone is acting fraudiantly or not.

    25. Re: California by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      *nods* litigation, while it has a wonderful DIY feel to it, puts the burden of enforcement on people with slim resources. Regulation on the other hand involves a funded group who's full time job involves ensuring entities are obeying the law.

      This is what drives me crazy about people ranting at how 'sue crazy' america is. Of course we see lot of lawsuits, a significant number of our laws are not enforced until someone starts a civil case. Many things that people assume the police and prosecutors would handle in fact can only be triggered by a private lawsuit, thus if one is wronged the state will not help (much less proactively investigate) on your behalf unless one is willing to invest the capital in bringing a civil case.

    26. Re:California by jythie · · Score: 2

      Even in B2B situations, often the companies that run these courses are indeed registered with the state.

    27. Re:California by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      Hack Reactor claims 99% placement?

      If true, maybe this really is an innovative education environment that aggressive regulation should stay away from.

      To quote the Spartans: "If."

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    28. Re:California by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      Would anyone hire any of these graduates for a software engineering position? I don't think I would unless they had some real world work experience to back it up. It sounds like these short programs are producing coders, not engineers. There's a big difference between the two.

      Companies are replacing many software engineers with low-paid outsourced "coders" with similar credentials to what these people will end up with. I suppose that in theory, the people coming out of these programs would be qualified to compete for those jobs.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    29. Re: California by jythie · · Score: 1

      Well, they do, via regulators like BPPE which set the standards regarding what you can claim and to within what margins those claims can deviate.

    30. Re:California by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      Yes, these regulations are laws against fraud, false advertising, etc.

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    31. Re:California by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Mod parent up. This is exactly right. All I can say here is thank god it is California.

      We already have laws against fraud. There is no good reason that anyone should need a priori permission from the state to teach something to another person. This kind of bureaucratic overreach is the reason we have 8.7% unemployment.

    32. Re:California by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      This regulation is post secondary education. I'm not sure that fraud is an issue, but it makes sense to crack down on the diploma mills and degree purchasing, and this happens to fall under those laws.
      Fraud would be taken care of by fraud laws, not by the regulations in question. Promising jobs at Google probably is not covered by these regulations, depending on the wording of course.
      Otherwise, you have a point that in general new laws shouldn't be special cases of existing laws, but that is irrelevant here.

    33. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The regulators are actually working with the schools, and the requirements are really easy for them. The regulators want them to stay open and are giving them a year to meet requirements.

      It's not nearly as dramatic as the headline makes it out to be. These schools need a fax number, a course catalog, a syllabus, and an area they call a library. One of the schools interviewed said the fax machine was going to be the hardest part of meeting regulations.

    34. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In general, regulation of higher education is how one determines if an entity is committing fraud or not. "Fraud" is not as simple as 'someone lies', it usually involves having a regulated baseline regarding what is expected in various industries and deviating from that baseline is used to determine if someone is acting fraudiantly or not.

      Actually fraud is basically as simple as "someone lies". The only caveat is that some kind of value changes hands due to the lying. If you say to someone, "I will sell you this stone that keeps away tigers for $5." and they buy it, you just committed fraud by simply lying to someone.

    35. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hack Reactor claims 99% placement? If true, maybe this really is an innovative education environment that aggressive regulation should stay away from.

      I went to a technical school my dad recommended after finishing my CS degree at a community college because I simply couldn't find a programming job after the .com bubble burst. They claimed a high placement rate as well, but I would say 80-90% of the students didn't get jobs programming. The school would count them as "placed" even if they found a job themselves at McDonalds. One guy who went there because he lost part of his leg in an accident and didn't want to work as a mailman anymore ended up having to go back to delivering the mail because nobody would take him with just a tech school diploma. He ended up with 10k in debt on top of that.

      The actual program was great, and could take someone from not knowing how to program to creating CRUD apps in a few months time and understanding basic ideas.

      It was sort of sad anecdotally, because out of a class of 20 there were 5-10 of us that were fine programmers but I only know of two that actually got jobs programming (I was one of them). The key thing to do if you go to one of these schools is to keep telling them after you graduate that you haven't found a job, so they will keep sending your resume out.

    36. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yes, and it's tragic. California was once the place that others looked to for innovation. As a child, I remember our public schools (in the City of Los Angeles, no less) being visited often by small pods of foreigners who would sit in the back of our classroom to observe what was going on. I found out later on that these were bureaucrats and educators from all over the world, who wanted to replicate the success of California's public education system. My father attended a community college free and he didn't pay tuition to attend Cal State LA either. He wasn't the best or the brightest - he was just motivated to get an education, and back then, community colleges and the Cal State University system were free to California residents with a high-school education.

      Now we've devolved into the highest-taxed state in the nation, and we hold the majority of the nation's poor within our state borders. There's more children living here in poverty (by Federal standards) than in any other state in the nation. This is what over-regulation and meddling has done to a once powerful state.

    37. Re:California by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      I'm sure they mean 99% of graduates and also full time for 10-12 weeks is 400 to 480 hours plenty of time to learn everything you need to know about one language and about the same amount of time you would spend in 4 years on a single subject at a regular college.

    38. Re: California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      *nods* litigation, while it has a wonderful DIY feel to it, puts the burden of enforcement on people with slim resources. Regulation on the other hand involves a funded group who's full time job involves ensuring entities are obeying the law.

      Unfortunately, it also often leads to 'regulatory capture', the phenomenon in which the 'regulated' group actually ends up controlling the regulator in practice. (See the financial industry's recent mess as an example.) The trick to fixing this, however, isn't getting rid of the regulation. It's making sure that those who *enforce* the regulations are rewarded for doing so.

    39. Re:California by hawguy · · Score: 1

      Would anyone hire any of these graduates for a software engineering position? I don't think I would unless they had some real world work experience to back it up. It sounds like these short programs are producing coders, not engineers. There's a big difference between the two.

      Companies are replacing many software engineers with low-paid outsourced "coders" with similar credentials to what these people will end up with. I suppose that in theory, the people coming out of these programs would be qualified to compete for those jobs.

      But when they outsource to these low-paid coders, companies don't have to manage them directly -- the outsourcing company has project managers and more senior developers to do that. They don't need to use their high-paid engineer's time to manage unskilled coders.

    40. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Strangely, many deep-red states are also struggling with poverty and high unemployment. If "this kind of bureaucratic overreach" was a simple explanation for high unemployment rates, then the problem would solve itself as non-California states became prosperous utopias of full employment. Real-world evidence indicates this isn't the case --- there must be big structural factors besides California's regulations responsible for the nation-wide (not just California and "liberal" states) employment issues.

    41. Re:California by khallow · · Score: 1

      but it makes sense to crack down on the diploma mills and degree purchasing

      I disagree. I don't see the sense of involving California in this process when there are accreditation bureaus. My feeling is that if there is someone who thinks that they should be able to get a certificate of education or other considerable effort just by spending money, then the diploma mill is doing society a service by taking the mark's money.

    42. Re:California by Obfuscant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This doesn't require any more regulation.

      It isn't "more regulation", it's "applying the regulations that already exist."

      Deceptive advertising is fraud. Don't "regulate" --

      Prosecuting for fraud IS regulation. And when statements like this appear:

      At Hack Reactor, where tuition costs over $17,000, 99 percent of students are offered a job at companies like Adobe and Google. According to Phillips, the average salary for a computer scientist at these firms is over six figures.

      it isn't fraud (assuming the 99 percent claim is true.) It's YOUR fault if you misread "a job" as meaning "a computer scientist" job. It certainly IS your fault if you think that you can teach someone to be a computer scientist worth a six figure salary in just ten weeks.

      And I hate to say this (no I really don't) but any outfit that charges $17000 for a ten week course needs some kind of overview. Even if the first two or three companies doing this are legit, such ridiculous amounts of money are going to draw hucksters like iron filings to buckey cubes. Legit course providers should have no problem with the regulation because it will help keep the less legitimate players out.

    43. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      Let's assume it's not simply fraud for a second.

      Why do you think these regulators will be any smarter than the people voting them into office? There's a good chance they'll just regulate good businesses to death, and bad businesses will have a faulty stamp of approval. Anyone with half a brain will perform some due diligence before paying $15000.

      Democratic paternalism just doesn't work - by spreading out the consequences of poor investment decisions to the entire population, it decreases the incentive to make good investment decisions.

    44. Re:California by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Informative

      Strangely, many deep-red states are also struggling with poverty and high unemployment.

      Except that is not true. There are five states with unemployment worse than California, and none are red (they all voted for Obama in 2012).

      If "this kind of bureaucratic overreach" was a simple explanation for high unemployment rates ...

      Nobody said it was a "simple explanation", but it is certainly part of the problem. In no other state is a business required by law to inform their customers that they may get cancer if they eat the toner powder from the laser printer in the back office.

      If a school (or any other businesses) appear to be using fraudulent advertising, then the state attorney general should investigate. But they should not be throwing up hurdles to everyone that wants to start up a business and generate jobs.

    45. Re:California by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Companies are replacing many software engineers with low-paid outsourced "coders" with similar credentials to what these people will end up with.

      Are these "low-paid ... coders" what you would consider to be the "computer scientists" that make "over six figure salaries" that the co-founder of Hack Reactor talks about, just after claiming that 99 percent of graduates of his course get "a job"?

      I suppose that in theory, the people coming out of these programs would be qualified to compete for those jobs.

      If Hack Reactor ten-week wonders are competing for "over six figure" salaried jobs currently held by "computer scientists", that's a really scathing condemnation of computer science as a science, I would say.

    46. Re:California by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, the federal government is working hard to prevent companies fleeing to these states like, for example, hassling Boeing for building a giant plant there claiming it's anti-union to poor souls inWashington state.

      I'm sure meme oh race to the bottom oh my meme savior of worldviews. Worldviews are schizophrenic, or at least neurotic: they hold logically incompatible philosophies as simultaneously true.

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      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    47. Re: California by jythie · · Score: 1

      *nods* that is indeed another piece to a sometimes rather dysfunctional puzzle

    48. Re: California by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Well, they do, via regulators like BPPE which set the standards regarding what you can claim and to within what margins those claims can deviate.

      You really think its OK to make it legal to deviate from the claim, by some margin?

      Thats the problem with regulation right there. Suddenly students don't have a legal recourse because regulating fucks said it was OK to lie to students so long as it was just a small "within the margin" lie.

      The students would be better off with no such regulation, because then they would have the legal recourses that the regulars want to deprive them.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    49. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 5, Informative

      Except that is not true [bls.gov]. There are five states with unemployment worse than California, and none are red (they all voted for Obama in 2012).

      And other states near the bottom of the list: Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippi, Georgia. Also, "voted for Obama" is a poor measure for intrusive state regulations --- one of your "bottom 5" states is Nevada, the place that allows brothels and pretty much anything to go (an "anti-California" when it comes to pervasive regulations). In other words, the picture is far less clear than you claim. Your statement was "This kind of bureaucratic overreach is the reason" (emphasis mine), which is demonstrably false. Fine, if you want to walk it back to "one small part of the problem" --- but it was your own words clinging to the simplistic distortion to support your ideology.

      If a school (or any other businesses) appear to be using fraudulent advertising,

      Which is what these places appear to be doing, on a wide scale. Thus, the state is placing them under the oversight of the regulatory body with the mandate and expertise to evaluate claims and practices in education. This isn't "throwing up hurdles to everyone that wants to start up a business"; this is putting up hurdles to a very specific class of shady businesses that've raised attention through dubious practices.

    50. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Lawsuits and trials are about the most inefficient means of regulation imaginable. I say that as a lawyer. I know a lot of libertarians, have a libertarian bent myself, but I laugh every time I someone suggests that courts are the resolution for problems like this.

      Let's just pretend a person took their last $15k and spent it on a fraudulent school. How is that person going to get his money back? You really think the prosecutor is going to prosecute? That's a joke -- the entire court system would need to be 100s of times larger (which is of course paid for by taxes).

      OK, so a civil suit. Sure, you get a trial two to three years from the date of filing the case, because several times your scheduled trial date got bumped to make room for rapists' prosecutions and those take precedence. If you try to do it yourself, you'll almost certainly lose. There are outlier pro se litigants, but mostly, they lose.

      So you try to hire a lawyer to run the case -- good luck. The costs of discovery will probably cost more than $15k because tracking down all the students and interviewing them, developing hiring statistics, deposing the school officials, building a case -- it's all expensive. The effect is that you won't actually be able to get an attorney unless you pony up thousands, because the case will cost more than you can win -- an attorney isn't going to gamble his own money on a losing proposition. He might offer to do it on an hourly basis if you put $20k or so in their trust account, but at the end of the day, winning will cost you more than you'll win, the attorney will tell you that, and then tell you it doesn't make financial sense for you to hire him. You of course are broke, so this last horrid option isn't even an option.

      Finally, let's take the Lotto scenario, you win and get all your money back, and it doesn't cost you dime to get. You aren't getting back all the crap you went through for years -- like living in a homeless shelter and getting your eye poked out because you didn't have enough money for rent. Yeah, there's some tenuous connection to your eye, but if you think that you're getting back everything you lost while waiting for your case to resolve, you're an idiot.

      The ONLY way litigation could work as a regulation device, was if the court system was expanded radically -- 100s of times larger, maybe 1000s -- AND both sides provided state paid legal counsel and investigators etc to take costs and fees out of the equation. At that point, you might as well just have reasonable regulation -- it will be cheaper and definitely way more efficient. If you did have such a system where litigation was the main tool -- everyone would be in litigation all the time. It would be like that Farscape episode where 90% of a planet's population were lawyers. You think a little regulation is bad --- makes me laugh. Being in trial your entire life would suck beyond any known measure.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    51. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If these education companies are claiming 99% placement at Google and Facebook, then they either have incredibly stringent acceptance criteria for their students, which is unlikely, or they are lying. Google hires the top 0.1% of CS grads. There are very few people that have the intelligence and education to get into the *interview* process for Google, much less make it through the interview and get a job offer.

    52. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what? Nowhere near 99% of the people working in the field will ever be qualified to work in the field. A lot of my job is interviewing and the sheer number of incapable developers that I see is staggering. I've seen more MS CSs than I can count that literally can't solve FizzBuzz, which we started having applicants code very early on in the process so as to not waste our time starting with the more difficult problems.

      I would love to see resumes of people who went through these programs come across my desk (actually, show up in our ATS). The most important qualification for people in our field is intellectual curiosity. Everything else follows from that. These people spent tens of thousands of dollars of their own money to learn how code. Our interview process can weed out those who don't know how to problem solve. But I'd much rather find developers with little to no training rather than developers with little to no interest in growing as a developer. The former I can work with. The latter are useless and have, drawn by hefty salaries, infected our industry.

    53. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 1

      Deceptive advertising is fraud.

      There are plenty of instances where blatantly deceptive advertising would be near-impossible to prove as fraud on the basis of any one isolated, individual case.

      Hey, buy my homeopathic cancer cure for $15,000, and you could be cancer-free in three weeks! In a study of 50 participants on the miracle treatment, 100% were cured!

      (Note: it's all true; you could go cancer-free, and a study of 50 people on our lists of people whose cancer had gone into remission showed a 100% success rate. But, don't regulate me to put this disclaimer anywhere, you nanny state goons!).

      To control deceptive advertising, as opposed to individual-instance fraud, you need the ability to monitor and evaluate a large number of cases, along with setting standards for, e.g., how studies should be conducted before claiming success based on a study. This is what regulatory bodies do --- they set up a framework for evaluating claims and behavior that can't necessarily be reduced to black-and-white "fraud or not" individual cases.

    54. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's a list of what not to do: http://www.bppe.ca.gov/lawsregs/ppe_act.shtml#94897

    55. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My feeling is that if there is someone who thinks that they should be able to get a certificate of education or other considerable effort just by spending money, then the diploma mill is doing society a service by taking the mark's money.

      Then California (and any government action) is also doing a service to society, for they're simply large scale scams with everyone being the marks.

      Sure sure, some of you know it's a scam but still have to pay, but that's similar to having a close friend/relative getting scammed, and you get affected too.

    56. Re:California by Capt.Albatross · · Score: 1

      This doesn't require any more regulation.

      Deceptive advertising is fraud. Don't "regulate" -- prosecute them for fraud if they're committing fraud. If they're not, then leave them the hell alone.

      Advertising that is merely deceptive is not, legally speaking, fraud. If you would like it to be, that will require more regulation.

    57. Re:California by lgw · · Score: 1

      Not students: graduates.

      Here's one dead simple way it could be true: every student at the end of the course gets a job interview from Google/Adobe/etc in some sort of pool. Doing well in the interview is a requirement for graduating. Thus, trivially, almost all graduates will get job offers. (Most of the big firms are just looking for the smartest few% who have any kind of coding ability at all to work with, so if you're smart enough going in, a few months of full-time training would work for you.)

      No clue what's really going on there, but it's not surprising if good vocational training leads to a high placement rate (still not believing the 99% without a pre-established deal with the companies, but that's not all that far-fetched).

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    58. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that what **regulators** do? They enforce regulations, amongst their other regulatory duties. Unless you think the police enforce EPA regulations and the like.

      Some people learn what words mean before they use them.

    59. Re:California by Xiver · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe Red vs. Blue isn't the right argument here, as in most cases. Maybe the right argument is liberty vs. statism. Do you want to be free to chase your dreams or do you want the government to secure your prosperity?

      --
      10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
      20: GOTO 10
    60. Re: California by iamhassi · · Score: 2, Informative

      Fraud? This goes way beyond fraud. How do you prove the education you recieved is fraudulent or not? If I opened a "school" tomorrow that promised to teach programming and charged $15,000 don't you think some government organization should make sure the students are actually going to learn something for their $15,000? Really this is to protect these schools, because if no one is watching out that means a scam school could open tomorrow and copy their business model and rip students off and it makes all the programming schools look bad. These cease and desist letters are a Very Good Thing.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    61. Re: California by iamhassi · · Score: 2, Informative

      "no good reason"? This should be marked +5 Funny. How would you like to find out that your next surgery will be performed by a surgeon that was taught by a grade school dropout that had never performed surgery themselves and they just bullshitted teaching the class? That's what you are saying you want, you want doctors and lawyers that were taught by "schools" and "teachers" that have no accreditation, no proof they know what they're talking about. Or wouldn't it be nice to know the "teacher" you just paid $15,000 and studied for a year with was a scam artist and ran away with the money? Great now you wasted a year of your life and you're $15,000 in debt and have nothing to show for it. I think those are very good reasons that the state should regulate who can teach.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    62. Re:California by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      OK, so a civil suit. Sure, you get a trial two to three years from the date of filing the case, because several times your scheduled trial date got bumped to make room for rapists' prosecutions and those take precedence. If you try to do it yourself, you'll almost certainly lose. There are outlier pro se litigants, but mostly, they lose.

      The problem with libertarian solutions is that you can't just isolate one issue, most libertarian solutions are a part of a bigger whole and require that other things are also in place. You could free up a whole lot of courtroom time if they ended the insane war on drugs.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    63. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think it's also a mistake to consider liberty as the opposite of statism. Just as reducing to a Red/Blue argument ignores how both parties frequently co-operate in bipartisan manners against freedom, so to assuming that liberty is the result of a minimal state ignores all the non-state systems of oppression. Establishing liberty requires critiquing, undermining, and dismantling all hierarchies of coercive power. The state is one --- but, so are, e.g., economic, racial, and gender hierarchies of oppression that can (and quite frequently do) arise in decentralized "free" systems where the strong are given free reign to oppress the weak. Dismantling state apparatus to make room for local feudalism is no step towards liberty. The assumption that the ideal "minimal state" is one that enforces Capitalist/market regulations (enforces contracts/property) is fundamentally flawed, because market systems are themselves unstable towards accumulation and collapse into tyranny. Rather, the need is to establish a minimal state that dismantles and devolves any accumulations of power to as many people as possible.

    64. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow.
      Stupidity out in force today. You can, even in CA, teach someone something. As long as you're not charging them for it. See? When money gets involved, that's when shit gets regulated. Note: I'm not charging you to school your dumb ass, so CA doesn't give a fuck.
      Maybe when you graduate from highschool and get out into the real world you'll figure out how to actually think critically instead of just spouting off retarded GOP talking points.

    65. Re: California by Solandri · · Score: 1

      *nods* litigation, while it has a wonderful DIY feel to it, puts the burden of enforcement on people with slim resources. Regulation on the other hand involves a funded group who's full time job involves ensuring entities are obeying the law.

      Clearly you haven't tried to run a business in California. The amount of regulation here is ridiculous.

      As with most things, either extreme is bad. And casting the argument by picking a data point far from the extreme you support can cause you to arrive at misleading conclusions. Too much regulation leads to wasted resources as everyone tries to comply with silly rules (why do I need a sign saying there are substances in my store known to cause cancer, when sunlight causes cancer?). A fair assessment of the situation will be based on the effectiveness/availability of litigation vs regulation. i.e. if a citizen litigating with 1% of his income can achieve better results than a business having to spend 1% of his income complying with a regulation, then probably litigation is the more cost-effective solution for that particular case.

      Any time you see an argument which attempts to show one method is better than another in all cases, that should set off warning bells that either the argument is overreaching, or is deliberately ignoring mitigating factors. Proofs that apply to all cases are exceedingly rare, and typically end up enshrined in textbooks as fundamental theorems and natural laws. That certainly is not the case for business regulation.

    66. Re: California by Stan92057 · · Score: 0

      Or bough there collage degrees through a spam email? That's scam was very long running spam scam.

      --
      Jack of all trades,master of none
    67. Re: California by s.petry · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That is a very steep slippery slope you are standing on. School != "performing surgery" and simply going to school has never given a license to a doctor to perform surgery.

      If the Government does not charge for regulation, you may have a point. If they are doing so for the revenue, then it's not protecting the public that they are worried about. This is the problem with most of these types of regulations.

      Lastly, if a student signs up to a college that guarantees a job at X company and does not get job at X company they can sue the school. If they promise to teach you C programming and teach you finger painting you can sue them as well. You seem to be concerned about the people wasting time as much as money, and dding overhead to schools won't change that in the slightest.

      Consumers are always partially responsible for their decisions. The trickier the scam the less responsible the consumer would be. To be honest, I don't have much sympathy for people that sign up to these schools because they can always choose to do 5 minutes of research on the school before dumping 15,000.00 on them. Most of that is done in loans at insane interest rates, so the student does not lose money. They can recoup court costs in civil court so don't lose money there either. Further, what better way of educating people about the ole saying "if something looks too good to be true it probably is".

      This is not the same as tricking some poor ole lady out of her life savings. These "students" are trying to take shortcuts and getting suckered because they want shortcuts. It should take a whole 60 seconds to validate a schools accreditation, and another 4 minutes looking in Google to find people complaining about the scam schools.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    68. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Libertarians have lots of good ideas, but regulation by trial is not in that set. For example, I totally agree that the War on [Some] Drugs is beyond idiotic and ridiculously wasteful (and that people should be able to make personal choices about which drugs they use). But even if you subtracted every single drug case out of the system, the system wouldn't be able to cope with the onslaught of litigation that would be required under a "regulation by lawsuit" method.

      Secondly, any lawyer whose gone through enough trials will have lost cases he or she thought was a total winner, and won cases categorized as "total dog." A jury trial is a kind of gambling in the most literal sense. You put up your money to cover the costs of building a case, then get a jury pool randomly selected from the community, and then try to weed out the worst potential jurors --- but it sometimes happens that the entire pool from which you get to pick, sucks. When you draw names out of a hat, sometimes you get reasonable people and sometimes you get crazies. Occasionally, every name drawn from that hat is a nut, and you are just looking for the least worst options.

      Then even if you win, the cost of trials is immense. It really is a terribly inefficient method of regulation -- it's as good of a last resort as we've been able to dream up, but for everyday stuff, it would be ridiculously expensive. If people lived in a system where day-to-day regulation, the assurance that businesses operate fairly, was done by trial, we'd all be broke from the endless lawsuits -- or more likely, all the little guys would just have to suck it up even more than we have to now.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    69. Re:California by s.petry · · Score: 2, Informative

      Prosecuting for fraud IS regulation. And when statements like this appear:

      You should research the word "enforcement", because it is not the same as "regulation". No, you can't use them interchangeably as you are trying to do.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    70. Re:California by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

      So it may be deduced from your lawyerly insight that there is no economic basis of regulating a hitherto unregulated school. It is safe to assume that anyone smart enough to believe themselves able to benefit from education would be able to protect themselves from schemers. I suspect that the government was not keen to be involved even in this case. The difficulty of litigation was probably the reason for a reluctant regulator to step in.

      I've been to some courses offered by private educators. The bang for the buck was not great, and I wouldn't have gone to one of these except my employer wanted us to go. A couple of weeks at this place was enough to pay for a year of university tuition, all for something I could have found out from a manual. I actually would have preferred to be at work.

      So if anyone is paying with their own money, there would have to be compelling evidence that the rewards justify the means. People being people, some people may tried these schools and felt hard done by and complained after failing to be refunded.

      The way to have an unregulated educational system might be fairly simple though. Let the school provide loans, and if the education is not up to standard the loans will not be paid. Typical students quail at the thought of debt but if these schools live up to their advertising, the business model ought to be successful.

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    71. Re:California by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      Prosecuting fraud is how you enforce the regulation against fraud. You need the latter before you can do the former. If you say "don't regulate", then there is nothing to prosecute, and you can't say "don't regulate, just prosecute".

      I wasn't using the terms interchangeably, I just left out the causal link that I assumed everyone could figure out for themselves.

    72. Re:California by PingPongBoy · · Score: 2

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      If you're charging $15k a head, and you're whining about the undue burden of a "hefty" $50k fine, then you have what, 10 clients?

      An unregulated school could well be a startup that has cash flow issues due to debt, low exposure, uncertainty, etc. Any extra expense even a fee notoriously regarded as a fine could be a real setback.

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    73. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 0

      The problem is, Libertarians often push for the isolated ideas that would only make sense in a larger system to be implemented right now. Sure, in some Libertarian utopian fantasyland, there won't be crooked oligarchical megacorporations with undue control over major economic sectors --- so let's slash regulations that prevent megacorporations from taking a crap all over everyone right now! Sure, in some Libertarian fantasyland, no one in power is a deep-seated racist or misogynist, because they'd be driven out of business. So, let's completely stop worrying about systematic oppression by race or gender right now! I have yet to see any plan for reaching said Libertarian Fantasyland that doesn't involve completely turning over the reins of power to an oligarchical elite, and just hoping they'll be fair-minded and play nice.

    74. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is an example of lying by deceit.

      Let's use a football analogy for the US sports fans.

      I offer a $64,000 football education camp. 99% of my graduates are offered a job with the [local sports team].

      The average salary for a quarterback on [local sports team] is $3M a year.

      If I'm not flat out lying, it sounds great, doesn't it? Let's assume that's what's written in the fine print. Sales people might "accidentally" be more optimistic.

      What if 99% of paid in full students fail to graduate based on my final exam:
      Case 1) Apply for a quarterback position at a professional major market local sports team. Did you get a $3M offer?

      If yes, you graduate! If no, you fail.

      Case 2) As above, but apply for a part time $3/hr +tips "waiter" concession stand job. Did you get the offer? Yes, then I haven't lied, you just didn't realize I was only implying it would be a job as a PLAYER. You just wqsted $64k because you didn't benefit from that.

      Case 3) The average salary of a pro NFL starting quarterback is (at least, I assume) $3M. The sky is also blue. Neither has anything to do with benefits I claim to offer, other than to distract the insufficiently cynical.

      I think that sort of behavior should be viewed as fraud and disclaimer, in big bold "Smoking causes cancer" style lettering. That's regulation and I approve of that sort. But then I'm a nut who thinks a chemical plant next to a municipal water source shouldn't be able to sell off assets and file bankruptcy to avoid paying for poisoning the water of 300,000+ people.

    75. Re:California by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

      OK, so a civil suit. Sure, you get a trial two to three years from the date of filing the case, because several times your scheduled trial date got bumped to make room for rapists' prosecutions and those take precedence. If you try to do it yourself, you'll almost certainly lose. There are outlier pro se litigants, but mostly, they lose.

      The corollary is that if no value was obtained after paying $15,000 the most expeditious allegation is rape.

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    76. Re:California by s.petry · · Score: 1

      The person stated that there was no need for additional regulation, and you said what I quoted in response arguing for further regulation. I did not rework your wording, you can read your own words.

      You did not leave out a link, you simply misused the word "regulation". You misused it twice in fact, but I only pointed out one misuse.

      On the surface, this may seem pedantic. Looking at your other statements it is anything but. It's good you have an opinion, but that opinion should be rationally expressed.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    77. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 1

      So it may be deduced from your lawyerly insight that there is no economic basis of regulating a hitherto unregulated school.

      Either you are being intentionally obtuse or I explained badly.

      What I was trying to say was that doing regulation by lawsuit would be exponentially more expensive, time consuming, and ineffective (because full and total compensation is rare, "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure"), than doing regulation by having regulatory agencies do it.

      In other words, I'm pro-regulation on this issue because the damage caused by educational entities suckering people into lifelong student debt for what amounts to nothing of value, is immense. And no, 18 or 19 year old kids aren't going to make the best decisions considering they're still developing.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    78. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Red vs. Blue isn't the right argument here, as in most cases. Maybe the right argument is liberty vs. statism. Do you want to be free to chase your dreams or do you want the government to secure your prosperity?

      I'm I'm a b/millionaire and I want to kill you, where are you most free? In a society with a government that punishes murder or one where everyone is free to do their own thing?

      A free market allows hiring assassins. Nominally, the old West was lightly regulated and the Pinkerton gang ruled. A prison might be viewed as the other end. Perhaps there is balance in between those two points we could find agreement on.

      If you (or your kids/wife/etc) are robbed, stripped and bludgeoned on the head and suffer temporary amnesia while suffering from cancer or something else, what should we do with you? You have no ID and no means of establishing your identity. What should happen when you turn up at a hospital, assuming we don't leave you to die in a gutter?

      1) We deny you service due to a lack of funds (aka Free Market).
      2) We provide service despite an apparent lack of funds (aka statist).

      Only #2 treats protects the dignity of human life. Long term economic analysis shows that the most efficient way of paying for #2 is to do so automatically, without extra red taper for insurance, etc.

      If you always vote for less regulation, eventually you won't be able to vote, because more sociopaths like me will become disillusioned enough to go ahead and start looting Wall Street style. If I get to choose between 1) being king and liquidating 90% of Earth's population and 2) letting someone else choose and not being king, I'm going for #1.

      We need to understand that and put controls in place to prevent that choice from being available to people who would choose that way, you, me, and the people who actually are positioning themselves already to make that choice.

    79. Re:California by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I wish it were that simple. I am, indeed, suspicious of an centralization of power, but that's not because some such centralizations aren't necessary, but rather because they have an unpleasant tendency to spread. You need centralized authorities to enable basic infrastructure. This isn't an argument of statist vs. private, as either is, in principle, capable of such activity, and in the past many such endeavors were done by private organizations acting with minimal government support. But you can't build a road system on that basis, because someone will own property in a place that the road must pass through, and refuse to sell it...or sell it to speculators who will see how high they can drive the price. This applies to all physical infrastructure, and even to the EM spectum. (I may not be happy with the way the government is managing control of the EM spectum, but it is largely operable.)

      Perhaps there isn't a desireable form of stability for a society controlled by humans. Corruption appears to be endemic...and strongly defended by those who benefit from it. For this reason I'm in favor of a minimal government, but this doesn't mean I think I can define one that will maintain itself as a minimal government. The original US Articles of Confederation was an attempt to do so which quickly failed. Many of those defining the US Constitution were attempting to replace it with one that would succeed. It didn't stay minimal. (To be fair, many of the designers wanted a stronger government from the start...there was a conflict of interest even among the designers.)

      P.S.: As a note of historical interest, always remember that the adopters of the US Constitution vastly (and arguably illegally) exceeded the authority granted them by the states they purportedly represented. There just wasn't anyone to stop them. This is a constant danger among systems without a central authority. That is worked out fairly well that time isn't an argument for next time.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    80. Re:California by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      If it costs more than $15k to sue someone for $15k in the courts then the entire system is broken.
      In my hypothetical ideal system, both parties would get free representation, they would each spend
      4-5 hours preparing their claim, present it to the court and the losing party would pay damages plus
      attorney fees for both sides. Problem solved. Total bill to losing party $15k plus a couple thousand
      to the lawyers on each side. It's insane to think that you can't spend 3-4 hours getting sworn
      statements from a half dozen students and be done with it.

    81. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An unregulated school could well be a startup that has cash flow issues due to debt, low exposure, uncertainty, etc. Any extra expense even a fee notoriously regarded as a fine could be a real setback.

      Well, pretty sure they just fixed their problems with low exposure.

    82. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 0

      My mistake if I implied establishing a functional free minarchist system was in any way simple. Indeed, I agree it may not even be possible --- my best hope is that it be attempted; an ongoing work-in-progress of negotiation and revision.

    83. Re:California by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Mod up. This probably isn't a complete list of all they must do, e.g. I expect they need to file papers with the state, etc., but....

      FWIW, I've taken classes from various "unregulated" institutions in California, and from one that transitioned from unregulated to regulated while I was there. (Never, however, for that absurd amount of money. Usually it was around $35 for 12 once a week meetings. I felt I got my money's worth...but I never expected a job.) The one that became regulated wasn't the most effective, though I didn't regret attending. (I got a degree from it...but nobody would ever care, nor did I expect that they ever would.) These places went by names like "the Free University", etc. Some of them gave some attention to the qualifications of their instructors, but it's better to think of them as a combination of an academic social evening and an on-line tutorial. (They weren't online, this was before wide internet access.)

      AFAICT, California regualtes education that is cheap in a quite minimal manner. I think every one of those groups I attended did more than they were legally required in regulating the classes. If you want to see regulation, consider serving food, even for free. THAT gets a bit excessive and inflexible, even if I understand that there are valid reasons.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    84. Re:California by Altus · · Score: 1

      The regulations have always been there. That this school has slipped under the radar for a little while doesn't mean that it is not something that is meant to be regulated.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    85. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They didn't pay $15,000 PER PERSON. They probably paid that for 30 people.

    86. Re:California by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      Yep, that's criticism of libertarian in a nutshell.

      - Point out how poorly government does X.

      - Lectures everyone how X wouldn't solve problem Y because X is so shitty.

      We could have better courts, but we would have to admit government's incompetence. Outsource the whole thing to private arbitrators, make litigants bear the cost, and only have government involved in establishing the validity of these rulings. *Then* what's the problem?

      Btw, I've never heard someone so proud of their own profession's inefficiency.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    87. Re:California by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      The person stated that there was no need for additional regulation, and you said what I quoted in response arguing for further regulation. I did not rework your wording, you can read your own words.

      You are wrong. I made no argument for "further regulation". In fact, I was explicit in saying it isn't new regulation, it is enforcement of existing regulations. Apparently it is you that cannot read my own words.

      And you missed some of his words. "Don't regulate" is not "there is no need for additional regulations". It is a statement that no regulations are needed.

      You did not leave out a link, you simply misused the word "regulation".

      Once again, you misread. I did not say I left out a "link", I said that I assumed that people who read the simple statements I made would know that enforcement requires regulation, so that when "the person" said "don't regulate, enforce..." he was wrong. You can't enforce what you haven't regulated. Regulation is a necessary condition for enforcement.

      On the surface, this may seem pedantic.

      No, it is simply a case of failure to read the words and a desire on your part to argue with me for things exactly opposite of what I actually wrote.

    88. Re:California by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      Expecting businesses to obey the law? That's crazy talk!

    89. Re: California by sabri · · Score: 2

      If I opened a "school" tomorrow that promised to teach programming and charged $15,000 don't you think some government organization should make sure the students are actually going to learn something for their $15,000?

      No. Because the government have no business being involved in a contract between you and me. If you do not teach me what you said you would, I sue you for damages. There is already a legal system in place, and the only thing that is achieved by these cease-and-desist letters is that innovative startups are being forced out of business by an overeager beancounter who found something else to do than stare out of the window all day, and allows incumbent "schools" like ITT-tech (where your noodle-recipe will get you a 100% grade, according to Wikipedia) to flourish.

      Welcome to the Soviet Republic of California.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    90. Re:California by sabri · · Score: 1

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      Not true. Look at what is happening at flight schools. Teens are often paying more than 100k to get a commercial pilot's license based on the promise that one day they will fly the big wide-bodies to trans-atlantic destinations. These schools are heavily regulated by the FAA and other bodies. However, they are still spitting out thousands of new pilots every year, who end up in a pay to fly situation to maintain currency on their licenses.

      The government has no business in a contract between you and me. If I lie to you, you sue me, it is that simple. Worst case scenario you press fraud charges. What is happening here, is that the schools have the burden of proof to provide evidence to the government that they are legit.

      Please proof that you have never committed murder.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    91. Re:California by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Expecting businesses to obey the law? That's crazy talk!

      In California? Yeah, it frequently is.

      California has a hostile business climate. Any businesses we can chase out of the state, we are chasing out of the state. Even Silicon Valley is struggling to retain companies.

      I don't know the merits in this particular instance, but in CA, the presumption of ridiculousness goes to the state.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    92. Re:California by s.petry · · Score: 1

      What? Please go back and read what you wrote? You seem to be changing your position, in addition to using the wrong words for the wrong things.

      This doesn't require any more regulation.

      It isn't "more regulation", it's "applying the regulations that already exist."

      This is your first misuse of "regulation", because this is enforcement that you are looking for. I'm okay with this as a mistake in communication.

      Deceptive advertising is fraud. Don't "regulate" --

      Prosecuting for fraud IS regulation. And when statements like this appear:

      This is your second mistaken use of "regulation", because this again is enforcement and not regulation. Worse, you are claiming that enforcement is regulation, and it is not.

      At Hack Reactor, where tuition costs over $17,000, 99 percent of students are offered a job at companies like Adobe and Google. According to Phillips, the average salary for a computer scientist at these firms is over six figures.

      it isn't fraud (assuming the 99 percent claim is true.) It's YOUR fault if you misread "a job" as meaning "a computer scientist" job. It certainly IS your fault if you think that you can teach someone to be a computer scientist worth a six figure salary in just ten weeks.

      And I hate to say this (no I really don't) but any outfit that charges $17000 for a ten week course needs some kind of overview. Even if the first two or three companies doing this are legit, such ridiculous amounts of money are going to draw hucksters like iron filings to buckey cubes. Legit course providers should have no problem with the regulation because it will help keep the less legitimate players out.

      The last sentence is arguing _for_ this additional regulation. I put it in bold just in case you can't see it. This may not be what you intended to mean, but it is surely what is meant when reading.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    93. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 1

      +2 hilarious

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    94. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      30 people?!? Highly unlikely. $15k does sound a little high, but its not out of the question. I have taken a couple of SAP courses and they have all been around $4-5K. Just for me, just the class. Plane tickets, hotel, rental car, food -- all extra. To be fair the course materials are usually about 500-600 pages for a 4 day class and often there is an exam that covers a few classes worth of material on the 5th day.

    95. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 1

      Taxpayers will pay for that free representation. You aren't going to get millions of people to work for free. Once you add it up, a reg agency is likely much cheaper. Secondly, proving even a simple case would take more than 4-5 hours of prep time.

      This context is a good example -- it's easy to have a gut reaction along the lines of: $15k for 10 weeks of classes --- that's a rip!

      Which is fine, but it sure ain't evidence. To start, you would want to find out how graduates fared, and six grads isn't data, it's a highly vulnerable set of anecdotes (there will likely be six others who were fabulously successful). Anyway, let's say the school turns over a list of graduates for the last 5 years without having to go through any time consuming discovery -- they just cough it up free (we're dreaming right?). You then have to interview several hundred, if not thousands, of people. The mere act of dialing that many numbers would probably be close to an hour, let alone spending somewhere between 5 and 30 minutes with each person. Think of how many hours would just go listening to "_____ is not available right now. If you would like to leave a message please press 1, or wait for the tone."

      Then you'd need to investigate the qualifications of the instructors. Not being an instructor yourself, you'd have to hire an expert to evaluate your data. You'd probably want to talk to people involved in hiring, and get an idea of how favorably certs from the school are treated. And on and on and on.

      As for your own client, you'll need to do at least a little looking at their past to see where he/she is vulnerable. HS dropout? Pothead? Learning disabilities -- anything along these lines the defense will be looking to use as an alternative reason for your client's failure. You need to know this stuff so you can prepare a counterattack.

      I mean, this is what you do if you want to win the case. If you want an outcome equivalent to flipping a coin, you're way works great.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    96. Re:California by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      This is your first misuse of "regulation", because this is enforcement that you are looking for.

      It's isn't a misuse of anything. The parent talked about "more regulation." I told him it wasn't "more", it was "the same". It's already in the books. It is "more enforcement", but if that was what you truly were arguing about you'd be jumping down the throat of the OP for saying "more regulation" instead of "more enforcement". He didn't, and you didn't.

      This is your second mistaken use of "regulation", because this again is enforcement and not regulation.

      And this is where I've already told you that I assumed that people who read /. would be smart enough to recognize that there cannot be prosecution without regulation to start with. I forgot about you. Saying "don't regulate, prosecute" is impossible, which was the point I was making. A secondary point only, with the main point being that this is not "more regulation", it is the same regulation that already exists. It is already being applied to other educational activities, and now it is being applied to programming "boot camps".

      The last sentence is arguing _for_ this additional regulation.

      Nowhere do I say "additional regulations". In fact, I am VERY EXPLICIT in saying that this is the SAME REGULATION, not additional ones. You quoted it but don't want to read it yourself: "It isn't "more regulation", it's "applying the regulations that already exist." The regulation being applied and under discussion here already exists. That should be, by now, painfully obvious. You could have learned that had you read the article. Or even the summary.

      This may not be what you intended to mean, but it is surely what is meant when reading.

      No. it is your repeated comprehension failure and attempt at putting words in my mouth in the face of explicit information to the contrary. Now knock it off and go harass someone else for a change.

    97. Re:California by mysidia · · Score: 1

      This is in California, where a latte goes for about $100, and a month's rent for a family of four probably exceeds $15K.

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course,

      This is about par for the course for professional training. A 1 week Microsoft Exchange or VMware certification bootcamp goes for about $3500, then a few hundred bucks to take the exam.

      Coder training in 10 weeks would have to be even more intense, to be effective....

    98. Re:California by idobi · · Score: 1

      I said: "...probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance."

      You said: "These schools are heavily regulated by the FAA"

      I believe that's what we can refer to as "in agreement"

    99. Re:California by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Taxpayers will pay for that free representation. You aren't going to get millions of people to work for free.

      I never said anyone should work for free but rather the losers should reimburse both sides.

      Anyway, let's say the school turns over a list of graduates for the last 5 years without having to go through any time consuming discovery -- they just cough it up free (we're dreaming right?).

      As I said, the system is broken. Any reputable school would gladly turn over the last 5 years graduates no questions asked. Most school
      probably have it published on their website along with job placements, etc... If I was the judge and a school hesitated in giving over all their
        customers to a trusted third party then I would immediately assume they were guilty. As a legitimate school, I would gladly turn over my
      records to a trusted third party. Why should I care if they waste their time calling and verifying my students? If I'm legitimate then it should
      be something else I can advertise on my website that placement records were verified by a third party. The fact that discovery is allowed
      to be time consuming is rediculous. It's one thing if it's records they don't have but every school should have enrollment and billing information
      that can be printed at the touch of a button.

    100. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're charging someone $15000 for a 10 week course, and promising jobs at companies "like Facebook and Google," you probably need to fall under some sort of regulation and compliance.

      that is the most retarded liberal assed drivel i've heard today.

    101. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that is not true [bls.gov].

      Yeah, I'm going to go ahead and call bullshit. The GP's comment was "Strangely, many deep-red states are also struggling with poverty and high unemployment."

      The BLS unemployment rates you describe are loosely correlated not on blue-red terms, but on population size. Bigger states tend to have higher unemployment, regardless of political inclination. Of the top 1/3 on the unemployment list, the red/blue distribution is roughly 50/50.

      However, the main point made was POVERTY, of which unemployment is a (weak) proxy. Poverty exists at a distinctly higher incidence rate in "red" states. 14 of the 15 worst states for poverty are consistently Republican. Texas, middle of the pack for unemployment, has an alarmingly high poverty rate because while people have jobs, they don't have jobs that pay enough to feed and clothe them.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_poverty_rate

    102. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm I'm a b/millionaire and I want to kill you, where are you most free?

      Wherever I'm allowed the most freedom to defend myself. Any other questions?

    103. Re:California by anagama · · Score: 1

      It is widely recognized that "loser pays" policies have a chilling effect on litigation because, really, every trial is a crap shoot. You could have the best case in the world, and one stray off topic comment completely prejudice a jury against you. It happens, and once people are focused on side issues, the game's up.

      As for the placement info -- there are privacy concerns with just turning it over willy nilly to anyone, but that said, it's likely the school will only have a last known address -- tracking people down is fricken hard sometimes.

      But then, there could be a system in place where the school discloses such information to a third party who ensures that facts back up claims ... ah, that would be the regulator in question wouldn't it.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    104. Re:California by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I have yet to see any plan for reaching said Libertarian Fantasyland that doesn't involve completely turning over the reins of power to an oligarchical elite, and just hoping they'll be fair-minded and play nice.

      I have yet to see how that plan is in any way different from what we already have. See, for instance, the Kansas state legislature considering a bill to effectively outlaw municipal internet services, a bill written by telecom lobbyists. Given how every government organization, from the town council to the state legislature to the federal government, dances to the tune of oligarchs already, haven't we already proved, by experiment, that the Libertarian Fantasyland is not only impossible to achieve, but the process of attempting it is actively harmful to most everybody? I think we have.

    105. Re:California by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      Outsource the whole thing to private arbitrators...

      Were you born this stupid, or do you have to practice? Seriously, Judge Dredd? That's your solution to the inefficiencies of the law profession? At least right now, the populace has some say over who gets to be judge, either by direct election or by election of people who do the appointing. At least right now, those judges have no financial incentive to make judgements one way or another, and if they do, they recuse themselves because there's a higher court watching their activities that also has no financial incentive to make judgements. You think dismantling all that would help?

      Criticize the practice of billing by the hour, by all means. Criticize prosecutors who insist that one particular person of interest travel to another country just to be interviewed, while no other is subject to that requirement. Criticize judges who make judgements in problem domains in which they have zero understanding. But don't even pretend that universal private arbitration fixes any of that. Don't even pretend that there aren't a whole host of absolutely awful problems associated with private arbitration.

      Talk about the best justice money can buy.....

    106. Re: California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That sounds good in theory but poses the equal thread of excessive bureaucratic power, where the regulators see their job as to simply punish the industry rather than make it work better.

      No, I think the key is to have the simplest and easiest to comply with regulations possible, with very clear and unambiguous enforcement mechanisms. Like a speed limit sign that says 65. No need to get into complicated interpretations or hire a regulatory compliance officer, just drive 65.

    107. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I hate to say this (no I really don't) but any outfit that charges $17000 for a ten week course needs some kind of overview. .

      Why? I assume the people paying $17K have some kind of brain, after all they are able to cough up $17K. I assume that if they are going to some sort of code academy that they have at least minimal computer skillz and know how to do a google search and maybe frequent a few forums to see if it seems like a good idea. If those places are actually using extortion or kidnapping to extract tuition, then maybe somebody should call the FBI.

    108. Re:California by femtobyte · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'd consider the best defense to include the communal societal infrastructure to prevent death-squads commanded by the ultra-rich from roaming the streets, rather than individual approaches like a gun under my pillow and hoping I can shoot faster than a hired goon squad. I'd greatly prefer the freedom to not constantly worry about being gunned down to the freedom to maintain an effective personal arsenal (which might not turn out to be as good as the personal arsenal commanded by a hostile oligarch).

    109. Re:California by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      every trial is a crap shoot. You could have the best case in the world, and one stray off topic comment completely prejudice a jury against you.

      Why even have a trial then if every trial is a crap shoot? Why not just flip a coin and save the expense? How do
      you ethically even practice law? The system really is completely broken if the verdict isn't based on facts. In a
      perfect world you should be able to have the same trial a dozen times with a dozen different juries and always get
      the same verdict. Obviously juries make mistakes but if you can't reliable say that there is a 90% plus probability
      of the same verdict a second time thru the system then we need a better system.

    110. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hack Reactor claims 99% placement?"

      Well, even Google and Adobe need janitors, right?

    111. Re:California by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. A form of regulation called "common sense".

      Some people are capable of learning from their own mistakes, and sometimes even the mistakes of others.

      As for the rest, no amount government regulation is going to help.

      Sometimes "regulation" looks a lot like restraint of trade by existing providers.

      Now, who is pushing for this "regulation" of trade schools, again?

      --
      There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
    112. Re:California by doccus · · Score: 1

      Except that is not true [bls.gov]. There are five states with unemployment worse than California, and none are red (they all voted for Obama in 2012).

      And other states near the bottom of the list: Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippi, Georgia. Also, "voted for Obama" is a poor measure for intrusive state regulations --- one of your "bottom 5" states is Nevada, the place that allows brothels and pretty much anything to go (an "anti-California" when it comes to pervasive regulations). In other words, the picture is far less clear than you claim. Your statement was "This kind of bureaucratic overreach is the reason" (emphasis mine), which is demonstrably false. Fine, if you want to walk it back to "one small part of the problem" --- but it was your own words clinging to the simplistic distortion to support your ideology.

      If a school (or any other businesses) appear to be using fraudulent advertising,

      Which is what these places appear to be doing, on a wide scale. Thus, the state is placing them under the oversight of the regulatory body with the mandate and expertise to evaluate claims and practices in education. This isn't "throwing up hurdles to everyone that wants to start up a business"; this is putting up hurdles to a very specific class of shady businesses that've raised attention through dubious practices.

      Exactly true. Sadly, some folks are so anti-regulation that they're dead set against ones that would legitimately solve serious issues, and consequently throw the baby out with the bathwater, in support of their ill-considered idealism.

    113. Re:California by DeathToThePatriarchy · · Score: 1
      You are reading the stats wrong. Yes, unemployment for the whole of California is high. That is not affected by the fact that there is regulation of for-profit education. It is because we have vast rural areas and a central valley (most of the state) that is strictly farming based. This is not affected by regulation of business.

      The most highly regulated businesses exist in the high population density areas -- San Francisco and surrounding counties, Los Angeles and Orange County, San Diego, and, to a lesser extent, Sacramento. The unemployment rate in SF is hovering around 5%.

    114. Re:California by doccus · · Score: 1

      Maybe Red vs. Blue isn't the right argument here, as in most cases. Maybe the right argument is liberty vs. statism. Do you want to be free to chase your dreams or do you want the government to secure your prosperity?

      It's pretty difficult to "chase your dreams" in an economy full of shysters and scam artists..

    115. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.
      Please cite your evidence of "nation-wide" employment issues. I happen to know that many "deep-red" states as you call them such as North Dakota and Texas do not share this problem.

      According to Bureau of Labor Statistics:
      North Dakota 2.6%
      Nebraska 3.6%
      South Dakota 3.6%
      Utah 4.1%
      Wyoming 4.4%
      Montana 5.2%
      Oklahoma 5.4%
      Texas 6.0%

      At the other end:
      Rhode Island 9.15
      Illinois 8.6%
      Michigan 8.4%
      California 8.3%
      District of Columbia 8.1%

      The middle range is a mixed set of states.

    116. Re: California by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Oh gosh! How did nobody ever think of suing before? It sounds so easy! Somebody should tell all those poor, unemployed, indebted people that if they just pony up $50k for a lawyer, they can maybe win a case in a few years.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    117. Re:California by bbsalem · · Score: 1

      Strangely, many deep-red states are also struggling with poverty and high unemployment.

      Except that is not true. There are five states with unemployment worse than California, and none are red (they all voted for Obama in 2012).

      If "this kind of bureaucratic overreach" was a simple explanation for high unemployment rates ...

      How to lie with statistics, those states may already have populations that are at a disadvantage, people who are not elitist techies or Republicans, and who voted for Obama, The class war is on. The Conservative motto is "I've got mine, screw you!" I hope you are happy creating dissention and exclusion. It may come back to haunt you, and sooner than you think.

    118. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'm a b/millionaire and I want to kill you, where are you most free?

      Wherever I'm allowed the most freedom to defend myself. Any other questions?

      Oh, so you're the guy who picks "the treasure room door" when asked to choose between A, B and C. Being glib isn't the same as being smart or wise, nor is it productive.

      So where on Earth can you be most free? USA, Somalia, International waters? Try to justify your answer with an actual, specific reason.

    119. Re: California by Bruha · · Score: 1

      Government already secures the prosperity of the ultra wealthy. The problem is that a majority of the wealth is concentrated in a thousand or so individuals that it's very easy for them to influence or be influenced by many things.

      Rich people had those laws written for a reason.

    120. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell me again why people choose to live in this state? I mean yeah... while everyone else is freezing this winter... they sit toasty warm... but... is that it? The weather?

    121. Re:California by gottabeme · · Score: 1

      Ok, maybe this is the wrong place for this, but how did the GOP get to be "red"? Whose idea was that? It wasn't but a few years ago that red represented the Soviet Union, communism, and generally, the bad guys. It's still that way in a lot of places: in the military, friendly forces are blue (friendly fire is "blue-on-blue"), and OPFOR are red.

      Is painting Republicans and Republican-majority states red a subtle way of making them the bad guys in the media? Maybe I'm too cynical, but it seems rather obvious to me. The primary color used to represent the USA, even in things like the Olympics, is blue.

      --
      "Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
    122. Re:California by gottabeme · · Score: 1

      I think there is no magic balance between having liberty and having government-enforced "liberty" from "hierarchies of oppression." You can't have both at the same time. If the government is intervening in the lives of private citizens and businesses and "critiquing, undermining, and dismantling" things it doesn't like, that isn't liberty--it's oppression.

      It seems to me that a lot of people say they want freedom, but what they really want is for the government to force other people to act a certain way--which destroys their freedom. But to them, that's ok, as long as they're not the ones being forced to act contrary to their preferences.

      You have to make a decision: do you want the People to have liberty, to have the freedom to choose, to pursue their dreams, including the freedom to act and think in ways contrary to popular opinion--or do you want the Government to force the People to do or not do certain things? Do you want the People to be free to do and say and think things that you don't like--or do you want the Government to not allow them to make certain decisions or say certain things that you don't like? Remember, one day you may be the unpopular one.

      Fundamentally, "establishing liberty" requires allowing the People to do things that may be unpopular, unethical, even immoral, up to a certain point. You can't force people to agree with you or to change their minds or their hearts. That's the job of society--specifically, a free society.

      You just can't have it both ways. But you don't seem to understand that. Look at this oxymoron you wrote:

      Rather, the need is to establish a minimal state that dismantles and devolves any accumulations of power to as many people as possible.

      Don't you understand that any state that "dismantles and devolves any accumulations of power to as many people as possible" is the very opposite of a minimal state? That's authoritarianism! It's dissolving the power of the People! "But it's ok as long as the government does it to everyone equally. Then life will be fair, and everyone will have the same opportunities, and no one will have any advantages over anyone else." And then you no longer have liberty. Nice going. Just wait until the government decides that you need to do something differently; then you'll suddenly understand, and then you'll suddenly be "a conservative." But I hope you wake up before then and advocate real liberty and real small government.

      --
      "Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
    123. Re:California by gottabeme · · Score: 1

      Man, you really don't get it. Who do you think comprises the "communal societal infrastructure"? You! You are the community and the society! You are what's standing between "the freedom to not constantly worry about being gunned down" and "a hired goon squad"--you and the rest of your community and society. You and your "effective personal arsenal" and those of the rest of the people in the community are what ultimately secures you against such violent oppression, because you vastly outnumber those bad guys. Haven't you ever heard that famous quote from a Japanese general about invading the continental U.S.? Haven't you ever heard of guerilla warfare? Vietnam? Afghanistan? Iraq?

      Or else, who is this imaginary group of people that provides a "communal societal infrastructure" that doesn't include you? The government? As we have well seen, the government can be coerced and bought by "hostile oligarchs"--yet it's the government that you want to trust to protect you against these "hostile oligarchs." That's a logical contradiction.

      --
      "Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
    124. Re: California by gottabeme · · Score: 1

      I think these people's thinking boils down to, "If someone did X tomorrow, don't you think some government organization should make sure they're actually doing X, and doing it correctly?"

      --
      "Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
    125. Re: California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      North Dakota really yes the tea party put oil shale there.
      Why can't liberals put oil in there states

    126. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prosecuting for fraud IS regulation. And when statements like this appear:

      You should research the word "enforcement", because it is not the same as "regulation". No, you can't use them interchangeably as you are trying to do.

      Actually, you're partially right.

      A regulation is a law, rule, or standard/demand that must be met otherwise punishment is a consequence.
      The enforcement of a regulation is what you are referring to. Prosecuting fraud *is* actually regulating fraud, because you are /enforcing/ the regulation. Thus, the quote is actually 100% accurate, enforcement is a regulation tactic, but not the only one, and sometimes not even the best one; but when used in the same context they are actually completely interchangeable because they in a way mean the same thing. But hey, if you feel like you wanna nitpick, be my guest. Just be sure to show me your English major or the last professionally published novel you wrote the next time you wanna grammar bash.

    127. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are not promising jobs, they are telling about the past results.

    128. Re:California by messymerry · · Score: 1

      Good on SB!!! You are absolutely right. If I had mod points, you would be first on the list. Only thing though, the unempoyment rate is really much higher than 8.78%...and if you only count jobs that pay a "living wage", then it's through the roof.

      --
      Dear Microlimp: I give you 2 valid product keys for win7 and you reject both of them. Piss off you wankers!!!
    129. Re: California by sabri · · Score: 1

      How did nobody ever think of suing before? It sounds so easy! Somebody should tell all those poor, unemployed, indebted people that if they just pony up $50k for a lawyer, they can maybe win a case in a few years.

      Sounds to me like you feel that the legal system is broken. If the legal system is broken, fix the legal system. Don't introduce legislation that burdens innovative start-ups to govern something that could be perfectly self-governed using a working legal system.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    130. Re: California by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      You should read this post. I don't think you fully grok the nature of the problems involved with "fixing the legal system" such that simple regulation would not be a better solution. The legal system needs a lot of fixing, but it really isn't designed for this task.

      Regulators can actively protect consumers from scammers while boosting the consumer confidence that enables our markets. Courts can, at best, provide retribution for the first round of victims and protection for the 2nd or 3rd.

      The regulations on this are pretty straightforward. Complying should not be difficult. If you think that's onerous on a business, you should try going through a few lawsuits. Without regulations, everyone would need a full time attorney.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    131. Re:California by kko · · Score: 1

      Haha. I see this kind of discussion everywhere.

      Honestly, I believe there are a lot of people who are not honest enough to accept that they don't entirely comprehend what in reality is a really complex system, and so absurd simplifications of some things seem to them like a sure fix to all the problems that ail us.

      Yes, we have problems. Yes, not everything we do is optimal, and there is a lot of room for improvement. But reducing things to a simplistic "GOVERNMENT SHOULD JUST DO X AND THAT WOULD FIX ALL THE PROBLEMS" makes people look silly, and really shows the level of political maturity and knowledge in the country that is supposed to be one of the older democracies in the hemisphere (that likes to "bring freedom" to other countries).

      People who don't understand complex systems, or people who don't think that government/the-state/society is a really complex system and are prepared to digest its functioning do not really contribute a lot to the political discourse of the nation when making uninformed statements whose simple and dumb loopholes are easily explored in less than a minute by comments such as the one I am responding to. Still it's a free country.

      But we should make a comedy show where we listen to all sorts of silly absolutist political pronouncements from the uninformed (and the dishonest, too, for kicks). Think of it as "An Idiot Abroad" but for politics.

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
    132. Re:California by kko · · Score: 1

      My first job was at an Executrain branch. We did technical classes of the sort you mention. Microsoft Official Curriculum, and Oracle crap were big money makers. But the difference between SAP courses or other cert classes and what is pointed out in this article, is that the SAP class you went to did not promise you a job.

      Or did it?

      --
      No, seriously, I just come here for the articles.
    133. Re:California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan are bad examples because the US didn't claim to be there to conquer them, enslave them and hear the lamentation of their women. They claimed to be the good guys, which makes liquidating a population a difficult choice to justify in the global media.

      If you want a real war of conquest, talk to the Indians/Native Americans, the regime in Yugoslavia (no answer, eh?), Tibet, Mongolia, half of Africa (at least), etc. I'd list more examples, but as an American Geography and history outside the states isn't "important". Oh, how about Hawaii? Do you think they chose to join the union? See http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1185344/

      You appear to be the naive one. The absolutist argument is made as an extreme example to simplify things. Slashdot is not a place that supports a thoughtful nuanced discussion anymore, if it ever was. Here's another example, simplified for ease of understanding. While the complexity changes, the qualitative factors do not:

      Isolated Towns A, B, C, D: 4 farmers, 1 soldier each.
      Isolated Town E: 5 soldiers.

      Town E has the ability to take any/everything from the other 4 towns. They can kill the others, gorge like grasshoppers and move on. When they kill off all competition, they can then shift to 5 farmers if they choose. This has happened in every modern society. We call the people from town E the government, and the people who submit citizens. Sometimes the people from E end up being pretty mellow once they are in charge, sometimes not so much.

  2. Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    California, possibly the state that receives the biggest benefit from programmers (in the form of jobs and taxes paid) wants to limit teaching programmers because they think they should control these coding bootcamps?

    Pull your head out, California before the industry picks up it's ball and goes somewhere else.

    1. Re:Let Us Control You! by gd2shoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Control is only a part of the equation. I bet they're after money. Control and money go hand-in-hand, especially in this state.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    2. Re:Let Us Control You! by c0lo · · Score: 0

      Your politicians want you more stupid than they are... how could they manipulate you otherwise?
      The worst thing: they a f..king stupid already.

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    3. Re:Let Us Control You! by jasper160 · · Score: 1

      Big Education hates competition especially when it may be better. for a fraction of the cost.

      --
      No good deed goes unpunished.
    4. Re:Let Us Control You! by keltor · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not sure if you realize, but these camps are typical of private education that doesn't give you "credits" in that they cost an arm and a leg. They cost as much as my Master's Degree cost me.

    5. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know what kind of developers bootcamp programs produce in 12 to 16 weeks. About 25% of them are useful as developers. 50% are useful as QA. And 25% are useful for converting O2 to CO2.

    6. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      California, possibly the state that receives the biggest benefit from programmers (in the form of jobs and taxes paid) wants to ensure that teaching programmers is o the up and up, and genuinely thinks that people deserve an honest education, not a con job.

      Pull your head out, Anonymous Coward, California may well be serving industry interests. Well, not the scam education industry, but the ones they do care about it.

    7. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pick up that apostrophe and make it go somewhere else.

    8. Re:Let Us Control You! by Dishevel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I know what kind of developers bootcamp programs produce in 12 to 16 weeks. About 25% of them are useful as developers. 50% are useful as QA. And 25% are useful for converting O2 to CO2.

      Sooo. About the same ratio as a Masters in CS?

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    9. Re:Let Us Control You! by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      The only thing that could have made your post any better was if you had decided to spell stupid as "stoopid".

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    10. Re:Let Us Control You! by jacknifetoaswan · · Score: 2

      My ME cost (my former company) about $36k, and while it was in Systems Engineering, from a highly ranked engineering school, it didn't teach me specifics about systems engineer, more the process and how to think about development. If these bootcamps really do saturate your mind with a thorough understanding of how to code, from start to finish, and a person is able to process and retain all that data, I think they're worth it. $15k worth of education that could, under the right circumstances net you a much larger return on investment seems pretty good, to me.

    11. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You aren't setting your standards low enough.

      The ones with the Masters in CS at least know what a linked list is even if they can't code one.

    12. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is, if we're going to go by efficacy, products of the college/university education system are mostly trash. And no, they don't necessarily know what a linked list is; they memorized some facts, but they do not understand.

      I'm an employer, and the situation is quite dreadful. Most people simply have zero idea what they're doing.

    13. Re:Let Us Control You! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got a pretty well worthless QA then. Good QA that actually finds bugs needs people who are more skilled than your main developers.

  3. Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California's efforts to keep the population dumbed down like sheep.

  4. Appropriate use of government power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is an excellent use of the government's power. I highly approve.

  5. If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by gnasher719 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    then surely there is good reason that this should be regulated.

    1. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by andyring · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why? Is there a specific price point at which regulation should be automatic?

      On what do you base your premise that regulation is both necessary and positive?

    2. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So should every technical training course for firewalls, networking, VMWare, etc. be regulated similarly? Those are $5k+ a week.

    3. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Doesn't that depend on what the course is worth? Programming is a relatively well paid profession, particularly in the US. It is conceivable that a good ten-week course could pay for itself almost immediately if a student could then expect to secure a better position with a significantly higher salary as a result of their improved skill and understanding.

      For contrast, in the UK university fees are highly controversial but can be up to £9,000 (almost US$15,000 today) per year. However, reputable professional training courses teaching even quite basic IT skills can easily cost an employer £500+ per day.

      If there is really as much competition in the Californian programmer education market as TFS suggests, it seems like in this case market forces really should be sufficient to keep prices fair unless their is collusion between the largest course providers to keep fees up artificially, in which case presumably the normal laws against anti-competitive behaviour should apply.

      Obviously I'm ignoring other relevant factors here, such as arguments in favour of education for education's sake, and concentrating purely on economic value. However, it sounds like the regulator might be doing that as well.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On what do you base your premise that regulation is both necessary and positive?

      Experience. History. Fraud.

    5. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by ph1ll · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Is there a specific price point at which regulation should be automatic?"

      Any financial transaction. This is fairly standard.

      --
      --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
    6. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why, if people are stupid enough to pay that?

      Albeit it was in the late 90s, my masters degree cost about $15,000.

    7. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Scutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Is there a specific price point at which regulation should be automatic?"

      Any financial transaction. This is fairly standard.

      Why? Should garage sales be regulated? Why does the government need to be involved in every facet of your life?

      --

      "Tell me doctor, with all of your defenses, are there any provisions for an attack by killer bees?"
    8. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      kill yourself.

    9. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Those sort of courses are for people who already have a job and a career, and the cost is generally paid by the employer.

      The kiddie bootcamps, on the other hand, are a sort of get-rich-quick scheme, promising an amazing future where your brat can earn really big bucks. Sort of like the modeling agency scam that lures in dumb parents and says "your snotty-faced kid will be a big star, just sign here, and pay us $$$$ in fees".

    10. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by CanHasDIY · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Is there a specific price point at which regulation should be automatic?"

      Any financial transaction. This is fairly standard.

      Why? Should garage sales be regulated?

      Depends on the circumstances - if you're having a garage sale maybe 2-3 times a year, it seems like a waste of resources.

      However, if your primary source of income is "garage sales," and you're holding one every weekend if not every day (we call that "running a flea market" 'round these parts), then yea, you're a business and need to be regulated.

      Of course, this is all ignoring the fact that garage sales are already regulated in most places, by way of permit requirements.

      Why does the government need to be involved in every facet of your life?

      Control, duh. In the case of private citizens, I highly disagree with the practice, as it limits liberty; however, in reference to businesses, the government should be up their asses 24/7/365 - there's a damn good reason the Constitution doesn't give any rights to corporations.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    11. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by cultiv8 · · Score: 1

      My spouse's employer recently paid that amount for a 2 day SAP course, and I'm pretty sure CA regulators are not going after the company providing the SAP course.

      --
      sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
    12. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by rossdee · · Score: 5, Funny

      " Should garage sales be regulated?"

      House sales are regulated, I don't see why garages should be any different.

    13. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So the state should regulate me paying my child an allowance?

    14. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by madro · · Score: 1

      There are price levels where the risk of fraud and abuse may outweigh the costs of enforcement and compliance. People who travel to other countries cannot carry more than $10000 in cash without reporting it. The risk is money laundering and drug running.

      Regulating everything or regulating nothing always leads to huge Type I/Type II errors. Reasonable people can disagree on the appropriate level of compromise.

    15. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by countvlad · · Score: 1

      Control, duh. In the case of private citizens, I highly disagree with the practice, as it limits liberty; however, in reference to businesses, the government should be up their asses 24/7/365 - there's a damn good reason the Constitution doesn't give any rights to corporations.

      The only entity that the US Constitution gives rights to is the US Government, by design.

    16. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by AuMatar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes. However those courses, while insanely expensive and not worth the cost IMO, do provide what they promise- a certain level of knowledge on the topic, so the vast majority are ok. The bootcamps promise that at the end of camp that you're ready for employment as a professional programmer and that a certain amount of their graduates (usually very high) receive jobs as a programmer within a short time of graduation. These are both false claims, and regulation should clamp down on them.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    17. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they should? You hand $5k over to someone and they give you crap training, what's your recourse? A bad review on the internet?

      How do you argue in court that you didn't get $5k worth of training? You can't. Thus, regulation.

    18. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So the state should regulate me paying my child an allowance?

      Yes. That child isn't yours, it's property of the State. You just pay the bills.

    19. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by ganjadude · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In california there are stories of little kids getting fined for running lemon aid stands in the summer. This is about normal for the over controlling sons of bitches who run cali

      Having said that I do agree that if they are making promises of 99% placement, they really should be forced to prove it otherwise its no different than snake oil

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    20. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by bruce_the_loon · · Score: 1

      The company might well be registered with them already. Searching for VMWare, Oracle, SAP on their approved schools page returns a number of training companies with registered technical offerings. Not living anywhere near California, I have no idea what training companies there are, so YMMV.

      --
      Trying to become famous by taking photos. Visit my homepage please.
    21. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by schlachter · · Score: 1

      sounds like the difference is in the spreading of false hopes and unreasonable expectations to justify the price point. There ought to be some consumer protections in place. Not everyone is capable of spotting a scam.

      do the networking classes say, "a week in our class, and you'll be working for, or against the NSA"?

      --
      My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
    22. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Constitution doesn't give rights to anyone. The Declaration affirms the pre-existing rights of all people. The Constitution delineates the restricted powers the people have ceded to the government that restrict the people's rights.

    23. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by jacknifetoaswan · · Score: 1

      I've (well, my company) paid $3k for a one-week course in CompTIA certification tracks. I don't see $15k as being outlandish, given what other certification courses cost.

    24. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by jacknifetoaswan · · Score: 1

      Well, no, that's not how it was intended, just how the courts have construed very specific language to the contrary.

    25. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      HEADLINE: California children protest for minimum allowances.

    26. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you Google 'Fined for Lemonade stand' (didn't try your interesting spelling), none of the top results are from California, and this http://mentalfloss.com/article/30457/6-illicit-lemonade-stands-towns-had-shut-down lists a whole bunch of cases, neither of which are from California. Which just proves that local officials make bad decisions everywhere, and if you want to criticize the California State legislature you should come up with a better example...

    27. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by stox · · Score: 1

      Where I live, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois, garage sales are regulated in their frequency and signage.

      --
      "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
    28. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      If they fall under the definition of post secondary education by California law, yes. Otherwise, no. That was simple.

    29. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by westlake · · Score: 2

      Why? Should garage sales be regulated?

      Garage sales are regulated.

      For traffic control, zoning violations and other reasons.

    30. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regulated by whom? I live in a suburb of Chicago in Illinois and the only one that regulates garage sales in my area is my home owner's association.

    31. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      " Should garage sales be regulated?"

      House sales are regulated, I don't see why garages should be any different.

      You cheeky bastard.

    32. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by bored_engineer · · Score: 2

      For every rhetorical question, there is an answer. I used to live in Beverly Hills, and was surprised when I learned that a permit is required for a garage sale. (I was amused to see in my search on Google that Beverly Hills, TX also requires a garage sale permit.)

    33. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by ganjadude · · Score: 0
      who modded this up? a simple google search of "california lemonade stand shut down brought up this for the first link http://www.huffingtonpost.com/...

      You're never too young to learn a life lesson - or, rather, a business lesson. As this local news report shows, the aptly named Daniela Earnest of Tulare, California had her lemonade stand shut down by town officials. (It turns out the stand lacked proper business permits.) Daniela, who's just seven years old, had the heartwarming goal to save enough money to send her family to Disney Land.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    34. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      Your solution is either to

      a) require that "enterprise" training fall under similar regulatory schemes, or
      b) restrict ALL courses ("Enterprise" training and these bootcamps) to be exempt from registration ONLY if they can prove the money for training is only coming from a corporate sponsor.

      You shouldn't shoehorn laws in, even for good intentions, and not treat all businesses equally. You (and the BPPE) need to have clear lines drawn for "enterprise" vs. code camps, beyond "I'm protecting stupid people from themselves". Honestly, we need to stop living in a society where every conceivable form of fraud and danger is legislated against. It's a less dangerous, but almost equally annoying derivative of trading in liberty for "safety".

    35. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, no, that's not how it was intended, just how the courts have construed very specific language to the contrary.

      Well, yes, that's pretty close to how it was intended. The Constitution is written from the standpoint that you already have all rights by virtue of existing; it lays out the circumstances under which government may limit those rights in order to go about its business and keep society humming. It's not really much of a stretch to call that granting rights to the government. Of course it cannot grant rights to the people; the people already have them.

      If you'd like to see some extremely prescient arguments about how government will inevitably overreach its bounds, look up the debates surrounding the Bill of Rights. Interesting stuff, especially given most people nowadays do think of it as the granting of rights rather than what it really is, which is a statement of rights considered so important that the government's ability to limit them was explicitly being curtailed.

    36. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In california there are stories of people getting fined for running beverage dispensers without any health inspection in the summer. This is about normal for the over controlling sons of bitches who run cali

      TFTFY. I agree that the law could use an exception, but where do we draw the line? $50 in sales, $500? What about a cheerleadering squad in a posh district running one at a football game? That could clear $5k. What if I buy a bunch of lemons cheap, not knowing or bothering to check that they are banned form human consumption due to listeria or whatever but allowed for industrial cleaner/scent use only and use those to make my lemonaid? If I kill dozens as a result, suing me won't get you enough to "break even" and jailing me won't bring them back.

      So with all that in mind, at what, specifically enumerated value does it become unsafe for the public to have an unlicensed and uninspected food service industry?

    37. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      I think we draw the lines at "kids doing what kids have done for the past 50-100 years if not longer"

      Every person I grew up with had a lemonade stand at one point or another in the summer time. Making some cash for a pack of cards or some candy or some toy. Its how we were taught the american dream, work hard and you can do whatever you want. Not work hard and the government will come down on you and fine.

      I understand your argument, I simply argue that we need to let kids be kids, and stop with the over litigation that has happened in the past 10-20 years

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    38. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Have you looked at what the requirements for compliance are?
      The requirements that I saw would not be violated by any honest training course. These groups are violating requirements like "Don't promise a job unless you can deliver one, and don't lie by implication and give them a job as a janitor after a course on firewalls."

      I'm sure that there are requirements that I didn't read, as I only read the first 10, and then skimmed, but every one that I noticed would not be violated by any honest class. I didn't even notice a requirement that they register with the state, though I wouldn't be surprised if it existed. (I'm sure the Franchise Tax Board has such a requirement.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    39. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by vakuona · · Score: 1

      Where you expecting to return results about lemonade stands being shut down in Texas when you specifically search for lemonade stands in California. This isn't Altavista!

      The point being made was that this sort of thing doesn't only happen in California, which your post doesn't disprove.

      Where I come from, we have a saying that transliterates as follows "If you go into the mountain looking for baboons you will find them".

      That's exactly what you did there.

    40. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think we draw the lines at "kids doing what kids have done for the past 50-100 years if not longer"

        I understand your argument, I simply argue that we need to let kids be kids, and stop with the over litigation that has happened in the past 10-20 years

      Whose kids and where? Pre-1965 white racist kids in the South? Their granddads and great grands were all racist, why can't they? That's the problem when you argue against legislation instead of offering your own SPECIFIC changes. Everything has a problem, the real determination is to see if the new problem is worse than the old one...

      http://www.foodpoisonjournal.com/tags/norovirus-outbreak/

      Niceness aside, what is the economic benefit of unlicensed lemonade stands vs the cost of licensing them or skipping them? How many people get sick from it, much less those who DIE? Who should be liable for buying listeria infected lemonade off a kid? The kid, the parent, the lemon vendor, the venue, no one? Because if there is no one on the hook for a multi-million dollar judgement in your legal framework, watch for sociopaths to head there (ala Wall Street/Congress/Freedom Industries/Etc). How many unnecessary deaths are ok to encourage a few thousands lemonade stands making a few bucks each?

      Try to offer specific solutions with your criticisms - don't just hand waive the liabilities you advocate for off.

    41. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must have flunked civics class. It is well established in law that the Declaration of Independence has ZERO legal weight. Only the Constitution has any legal standing.

    42. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like all institutions of higher learning, sometimes you complete your coursework to discover that there are no applicable jobs available and you have completely wasted both your time and money. It's the consumer's problem if they didn't do their research.

    43. Re:If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course... by eric4209 · · Score: 1

      I run Software Craftsmanship Guild in Ohio which does .NET and Java 12 week programs. We have a very high placement rate as well, it's not a complicated formula:

      1. We only let in students who pass a programming assessment/aptitude test
      2. We encourage only strong communicators to join us
      3. We remove all distractions, teach good habits from day 1 (unit testing, naming, refactoring, debugging, etc)
      4. We only allow instructors with 10+ years of professional experience who are excellent mentors to enter the classroom

      Our students end up with north of 700 hours when they are done, which focused as it is is more hours with qualified instruction than you get in a typical 4 year degree, it's just very compressed.

      The typical student already has a degree and doesn't want to pay tens of thousands to go back to college for several more years just to learn skills that aren't relevant because it takes a college ~3 years to get coursework accredited and into the classroom.

      Our employer partners love our graduates, they're experienced outside of IT, strong communicators, they know the tools and stacks the employers are actually using (many CS grads have to learn those on the job), so they ramp up quicker. It's really not all that difficult getting a high placement rate with smart, motivated people in the class.

      On a side note, we are fully compliant with Ohio education regulation bodies. The reaction of the camps in the article I think is overblown, most the regulations make perfect sense (refund policies, auditing the classroom/teachers, putting up bonds so if you go out of business the students get their money back, rules for marketing, like not promising employment, etc)

  6. “Our primary goal is not to collect a fine.. by Cornwallis · · Score: 2, Insightful

    “Our primary goal is not to collect a fine. It is to drive them to comply with the law,” said Russ Heimerich, a spokesperson for BPPE. Heimerich is confident that these companies would lose in court if they attempt to fight BPPE.

    Sounds like a real charmer...

  7. Compliance by Akratist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I absolutely detest the word "compliance." For some reason, it seems out of character to be used in what is ostensibly a "free society."

    1. Re:Compliance by Smidge204 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I dunno, but compliance is not necessarily a bad thing.

      I want all of my electrical and electronic devices to comply with appropriate standards and regulations so they all work together and are safe to use.

      I want vehicles and buildings to comply with the myriad of safety regulations.

      I want my food and food preparation/handling facilities to comply with best practices.

      I don't know what the BPPE requires with respect to compliance (article does not say in what way these places are not in compliance), but maybe I want that too.
      =Smidge=

    2. Re:Compliance by _UnderTow_ · · Score: 1

      I don't know what the BPPE requires with respect to compliance (article does not say in what way these places are not in compliance), but maybe I want that too. =Smidge=

      I fully agree. While at first it sounds like a typical bureaucratic money grab, I'd like to see what laws they're violating before further rushing to judgement.

  8. Big $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ooops looks like some Big $$ Colleges are a bit miffed they cant rape $$$ off of the masses and have called in a favor or two.

    1. Re:Big $$$ by tibman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Maybe if colleges could teach software development there wouldn't be a need for these code bootcamps.

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    2. Re:Big $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a difference between speech and a contract.

    3. Re:Big $$$ by Ambiguous+Puzuma · · Score: 1

      Fraudulent speech is still speech, yet even most libertarians agree with penalizing fraud. Commercial speech being speech doesn't automatically exempt it from regulation.

  9. Curious where he'd draw the line by barlevg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What are the regulations regarding wilderness survival camps? What about rock & roll fantasy camps? Is he going to start going after knitting retreats?

    1. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by Dan+Lyke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think that it's probably about advertising: They're claiming 99% job placement, waving around the idea of six figure salaries, for $17k and 10 weeks. I'm not sure where you draw the line, but having tried to help counsel some lower income people who were looking at nursing schools, this is way the hell over the line.

    2. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by operagost · · Score: 1

      We already have laws against fraud.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    3. Re:Curious where he'd draw the line by gman003 · · Score: 1

      Well, these coding courses are aimed at creating careers - the "students" are trying to make this their job. People going to any of your examples are not - they may be developing skills, but the camps are for hobbies, not careers.

      That seems like a significant enough difference to me.

    4. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by meta-monkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, and the spirit of those laws is encapsulated in the regulation of postsecondary education. These bootcamps are trying to skirt the regulations designed to prevent fraud in the education market. They're being asked to comply with the anti-fraud regulations.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    5. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Nursing schools are a good example, as there is a surplus of nurses in many area due to older nurses staying in the job market.

      Commercial shools exist to fill classes and make money, any other outcomes are secondary.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    6. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by BlazingATrail · · Score: 0

      Tell that to amazing diet pills, rock hard ab-master 2000 and monkey balls male enhancement pills. They all work or your money back!

    7. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I agree. The grandparent doesn't recognize there's a difference between places that offer "experience/entertainment" (rock & roll fantasy camps, knitting retreats) and places that offer (or purport to offer) " professional education/experience" (the coder bootcamps). He's mistakenly keying off the (practically generic) term in common between them - "camp".

      The line seems to be drawn (correctly IMO) somewhere in between offering intangible experiences and purporting to offer tangible financial benefits. There's always going to be some that have to be examined on a case-by-case basis (like survival schools that purport to offer real life skills), but the line is there regardless.

      Educational scams have been around a very long time, which is why the line and a government bureau to enforce it exists.

    8. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say "six figure salary" like that means much in Silicon Valley. I'm earning almost double what I was getting in Utah but my standard of living hasn't changed.

    9. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by Altus · · Score: 1

      And we have regulations on paid educational services to make sure those are legitimate as well and what do you know, people actually want to enforce those regulations.... what a country!

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    10. Re: Curious where he'd draw the line by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt that it's it.

      a) Law schools get away with a lot worse in terms of stating graduate placements and salaries and charge a LOT more and take a much bigger commitment.

      b) They're not going to law off the moment these schools drop specific guarantees of placement

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
  10. money is the clear motivation by kbush$ · · Score: 1, Funny

    “Our primary goal is not to collect a fine. It is to drive them to comply with the law,” ... Least believable statement i've read today.

    1. Re:money is the clear motivation by glennrrr · · Score: 1

      I'd say that telling people what to do is a prime motivator for people who go into government. So, I'd tend to believe it.

    2. Re:money is the clear motivation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought Judge Dredd was the law, not an educator compliance nazi. This makes me sick.

      "I'm DA LAWWUuuuuuHHH!"

  11. California has stupid laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    BPPE, a unit in the California Department of Consumer Affairs, is arguing that the bootcamps fall under its jurisdiction and are subject to regulation. BPPE is charged with licensing and regulating postsecondary education in California, including academic as well as vocational training programs.

    California's laws may be stupid, but clearly they have laws requiring licensing for training programs.

  12. Just more unelected beurocrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who somehow have the power of law over us all. How many levels of indirection before representative democracy becomes meaningless?

    1. Re:Just more unelected beurocrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The state's democratically-elected representatives legislated this regulatory agency into existence and tasked it with enforcing state laws in this area.
      That's the way executive-branch agencies typically function in the US.
      What's your alternative? Is the legislature supposed to be the executive as well?
      Should we have elections for every state agency?

    2. Re:Just more unelected beurocrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do we get to fight their fines in court or are people guilty until proven innocent? The problem is that a law can create an agency, and then that agency can invent and enforce "rules" which aren't actually laws. It's a huge loophole.

  13. No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authority by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If these places are not offering a recognized credential of completion (such as a degree or certificate recognized by the prevailing accreditation bodies), then they are not an educational institution subject to state regulation. Instead, they fall under Federal Dept. of Ed Work Training facilities.

    Federal Law is settled on this, and there are at least 100 cases that I can find that set this precedent.

  14. All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong questions.. by Improv · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, what does compliance involve? That's the first question we should be asking.

    If your local libertarian hot dog stand guy rages at you about maybe being shut down because the health department is on his back, instead of saying "fuck guvment", maybe you should figure out if it's something as simple as them having hygiene standards for how he cooks, and some small fee for a license. I mean, maybe there is something unreasonable or crazy, and there are some industries that corrupt government and do rent-seeking in order to limit competition, but these details matter.

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  15. Re:No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authori by EmagGeek · · Score: 2

    Ok, I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you there. Would you care to cite any of these "100 cases" for us laypeople?

  16. Postsecondary Education? Description fits the bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The summary makes it sound like these are people in makerspaces getting free skills. The article says that these places are charging tuition $15k - $19k for an intensive (~ few months) training course, presumably with a certificate of completion. The state and the public have a vested interest in ensuring people get their money's worth. The article also states that the bureau doesn't not demand immediate compliance in 2 weeks, but that they show progress towards attaining compliance. Look around you. Experience shows that the free market is not effective at eliminating scammers. Sometimes regulation and auditing is good.

  17. Lets start killing all the authoritarians. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, it will be ugly hypocritical for a while but once they're all dead we can live in a utopia.

  18. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Nah...fuck guvment!

  19. Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If too many people learn to code, we will have more crackers, cybercriminals, child pronographers, terrorists, money launderers and pirates. This is a matter of national security!

    If anything, this measure is too little, too late.

  20. Re:No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authori by tibman · · Score: 1

    I only checked out http://www.hackbrightacademy.c... but they don't appear to offer any kind of certification. Just 10 weeks of training for women that ends with a "Career Day".

    --
    http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
  21. California, you voted for this. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Enjoy the ride. Next time vote Republican.

  22. nothing to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next we need a license of sorts to turn on lightbulbs in a certain order ...
    or even need a license to write a book (on how to turn on lightbulbs)?

  23. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No, really: Why?

    Where in the Constitution (federal or state) does it enumerate regulating education as a power of government?

    1. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are aware the constitution is not the only piece of legislation the regulates societal affairs, right? It is not without reason that there is a legislative branch in the government.

    2. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are aware the constitution is not the only piece of legislation the regulates societal affairs, right?

      You are apparently unaware that both the US and California state constitutions are not pieces of legislation.

      Incidentally, the US Constitution does give the state of California the ability to regulate such "bootcamps" via the Ninth Amendment. The real issue is whether California's constitution does.

    3. Re:Why? by AuMatar · · Score: 3, Informative

      10th amendment. "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

      Since the US Constitution doesn't prohibit the regulation of education, it is permitted to the states.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    4. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The California Constitution, Article 9, Section 1 clearly grants broad regulatory authority to the state legislature over education matters.

    5. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'd say Article 9 of the California Constitution. With a side of Article 4 and 5.

      ARTICLE 9 EDUCATION

      SECTION 1. A general diffusion of knowledge and intelligence being
      essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the
      people, the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the
      promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricultural
      improvement.

      So if the Legislature wishes to encourage the promotion of such activity by preventing fraud and dishonesty in such endeavors, it's certainly a reasonable interpretation.

      One might even take it as an obligation on their part to use all suitable means to do so.

    6. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incidentally, the US Constitution does give the state of California the ability to regulate such "bootcamps" via the Ninth Amendment.

      That's the tenth amendment there chief. Ninth covers rights of the people not enumerated by the constitution.

    7. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I thought the two amendments were reversed.

    8. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California education code

      94801. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
            (a) In 2007, more than 400,000 Californians attended more than
      1,500 private postsecondary schools in California.
            (b) Private postsecondary schools can complement the public
      education system and help develop a trained workforce to meet the
      demands of California businesses and the economy.
            (c) Numerous reports and studies have concluded that California's
      previous attempts at regulatory oversight of private postsecondary
      schools failed to ensure student protections or provide effective
      oversight of private postsecondary schools. Previous laws and
      regulatory oversight were allowed to expire on June 30, 2007, with
      some skeletal functions, continued by urgency legislation, that were
      allowed to expire on June 30, 2008.
            (d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter
      to ensure all of the following:
            (1) Minimum educational quality standards and opportunities for
      success for California students attending private postsecondary
      schools in California.
            (2) Meaningful student protections through essential avenues of
      recourse for students.
            (3) A regulatory structure that provides for an appropriate level
      of oversight.
            (4) A regulatory governance structure that ensures that all
      stakeholders have a voice and are heard in policymaking by the new
      bureau created by this chapter.
            (5) A regulatory governance structure that provides for
      accountability and oversight by the Legislature through program
      monitoring and periodic reports.
            (6) Prevention of the deception of the public that results from
      conferring, and use of, fraudulent or substandard degrees.
            (e) The Legislature advises future policymakers to continually and
      carefully evaluate this chapter and its administration and
      enforcement. Where there are deficiencies in the law or regulatory
      oversight, the Governor and the Legislature should act quickly to
      correct them.

    9. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 1

      Note that this section is merely a "declaration" without any legal relevance unless it is referenced by enforcement provisions elsewhere or the courts decide to care about the "intent" of legislation. Further, it's legislation and is not a part of California's constitution. Legislation is not automatically constitutional.

    10. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 1

      So if the Legislature wishes to encourage the promotion of such activity by preventing fraud and dishonesty in such endeavors, it's certainly a reasonable interpretation.

      Sounds like it to me.

      One might even take it as an obligation on their part to use all suitable means to do so.

      My take on that is a bit different. Once a really powerful party has an moral obligation to fuck with me, it's just going to go downhill from there. Part of the reason, I don't live in California any more.

    11. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      While discretion seems like a good idea, there are times where obligation is the better idea. Once a really powerful party has no moral obligation, they will gladly fuck with you, and it's all downhill from there.

      Part of the reason that I wouldn't live in a deregulated environment. Which could include California, if you think of the Enron crisis.

    12. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Article 9 of the California Constitution gives the California Government the right to regulate education. And education, not being enumerated in the Bill of Rights, is a power given to the states by the 10th amendment.

    13. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 1

      While discretion seems like a good idea, there are times where obligation is the better idea. Once a really powerful party has no moral obligation, they will gladly fuck with you, and it's all downhill from there.

      I'll just note that if they aren't allowed to fuck with you, moral pretext or not, then that constraint is far more effective than obligation. And if they don't exist at all, then that's even more effective than an effective constraint.

      Part of the reason that I wouldn't live in a deregulated environment. Which could include California, if you think of the Enron crisis.

      The Enron crisis was not in itself significant. A business committed fraud and it fell. By mentioning California, you indicate you are actually speaking of the California electricity crisis which was far more than just a out of control business. There the California state government forced the three private electricity utilities to lose huge sums of money in a rigged market (where the utilities were forced to buy very expensive power well above the price that they were selling to their customers) while providing hugely profitable opportunities to Enron and other electricity traders.

      It was a straightforward transfer of wealth from the private utilities to certain generators and electricity traders by the California government. This only stopped when the second of the three electricity utilities was about to go bankrupt. It wasn't a deregulated environment else California would not have been able to force the utilities to make such adverse and destructive choices.

      The California electricity crisis is a demonstration that you can screw up deregulation in a really bad way. But it's not a demonstration that deregulation is inherently bad or problematic.

      And of course, this pathetic attempt at deregulation happened in California. Maybe we ought to consider that aspect of things.

    14. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is educating someone not speech??

    15. Re:Why? by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      No. If you're selling it as a service, its a business transaction. They have every right to regulate that. Now if they just want to put up a website that releases their material without being paid, then it becomes an act of speech.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    16. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll just note that if they aren't allowed to fuck with you, moral pretext or not, then that constraint is far more effective than obligation. And if they don't exist at all, then that's even more effective than an effective constraint.

      Not being allowed to fuck with you...is itself a moral obligation, it is a severe constraint, and if you're concerned about the abuses that educational obligations would bring, that one should frighten you even more.

      Not being able to fuck with you, whether due to non-existence or some alternative, well, good luck achieving that. I don't see it happening without radical changes in human existence. Yeah, I could be very free if I was the only person on the planet, but even that may not work out in the end. As Clarence Rimbro learned.

      But it's not a demonstration that deregulation is inherently bad or problematic.

      You could apply that to regulation as well.

      And of course, this pathetic attempt at deregulation happened in California. Maybe we ought to consider that aspect of things.

      To refer to a famous work:

      "It can happen here"

      The crisis in California was not one of electricity, it was one of business greed, and a lack of obligation applied to the right parties, while the wrong obligation was applied to others. That's why I call it the Enron Crisis. They made it happen. And I have no doubts that others would do the same elsewhere.

      If you want to believe you can overcome such influences, and do it right, then you can hardly assert the same concept does not apply to regulation.

      Which will end up working out worse for me? I don't know.

      I do know that Texas is one of the big proponents of TRAP though, so...they do show that they're willing to go to great lengths for their own causes.

    17. Re:Why? by khallow · · Score: 1

      The crisis in California was not one of electricity, it was one of business greed, and a lack of obligation applied to the right parties, while the wrong obligation was applied to others. That's why I call it the Enron Crisis. They made it happen. And I have no doubts that others would do the same elsewhere.

      I already explained why "business greed" doesn't begin to explain the California electricity crisis. A big thing to remember is that if things had gone as planned, the remaining two private utilities, Consolidated Edison and PH&E would have completed deregulation, customers would have been charged the higher market prices during peak load periods, demand would have dropped as a consequence, and the crisis wouldn't have happened. There would have been no huge opportunity for Enron to exploit.

      The California state government prevented that from happening and created a huge mess as a result.

      Alternately, California government could have relaxed the rules of the market and allowed the three utilities to buy more power outside of the expensive spot market. That actually happened around mid 2001. But it could have been done in August 2000, for example, when San Diego Gas & Electric had first filed a complaint about the issue.

      The crisis is appropriately named because a) it was the electricity market and not the Enron market, and b) because the primary culprit wasn't Enron but the California government which acted in a remarkably harmful way for the better part of a year.

    18. Re:Why? by EuclideanSilence · · Score: 1

      It still remains to establish that the California State Constitution enumerates the powers of regulation of education, which it almost certainly does. The tenth amendment doesn't enumerate state powers, it merely reserves them for the states to enumerate if they decide to.

  24. The Alternative Is Worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's actually a pretty good reason there are accredation standards in education. People are paying a lot of money. It's hard for someone to know (without actually taking the course) if the course is valuable or worthless. There are plenty of shysters out there who couldn't care less if you learn - they're just out for your money, and provide as little education as they can get away with ('For Profit" online universities are, IMO, more scam than educators).

    Whether it's a government or a private body, setting clear expectations on curriculum standards and certifying compliance with them is a highly useful service to keep students from getting victimized. Which means "compliance" with someone else's idea of what a reasonable student needs is not only not anathema, it can be a Very Good Thing.

    Being free to dupe people into paying a lot of money for a worthless service isn't exactly in character with a "free society" in any but the most extreme laisse faire ideologies.

    1. Re:The Alternative Is Worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There's actually a pretty good reason there are accredation standards in education. People are paying a lot of money. It's hard for someone to know (without actually taking the course) if the course is valuable or worthless. There are plenty of shysters out there who couldn't care less if you learn - they're just out for your money, and provide as little education as they can get away with ('For Profit" online universities are, IMO, more scam than educators).

      Whether it's a government or a private body, setting clear expectations on curriculum standards and certifying compliance with them is a highly useful service to keep students from getting victimized. Which means "compliance" with someone else's idea of what a reasonable student needs is not only not anathema, it can be a Very Good Thing.

      Being free to dupe people into paying a lot of money for a worthless service isn't exactly in character with a "free society" in any but the most extreme laisse faire ideologies.

      Your post fits the US educational system to a tee.

    2. Re:The Alternative Is Worse by HiThere · · Score: 1

      FWIW, there are also private regulatory bodies, like the Western College Association, that regulate Colleges and Universities. They have MUCH stricter rules than does the state of California. But they can't put you out of business if you don't meet them, only forbid you from using certain terms to describe your product. (I think that's trademark law, but I'm not sure.)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  25. ED-209 by brianerst · · Score: 1

    You have 15 seconds to comply. You are in direct violation of penal code 113, section 9...

  26. Flea markets? ANY cash transaction? by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any financial transaction. This is fairly standard.

    If I beat you every day your whole life, it's "fairly standard" but does not make it right.

    There's lots of transactions that are not really regulated, especially cash ones...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  27. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    They're pissed off that they can't rip off desperate people looking for jobs teaching information freely available on the internet.

    It's kind of sad, really.

  28. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I disagree on a fundamental level because food service is a public health issue whereas wasting your money on a class is nobody's business but your own.

  29. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Your hot dog stand may SEEM to have been doing just fine, but if you don't give a but to us hot dog stands have a mysterious way of causing terrible accidents to youse owners. So cough it up.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  30. Re:“Our primary goal is not to collect a fin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find the reflective response that industry is virtuous and the regulators power mad to be unwarranted. My view is that neither party is especially virtuous but those motivated by money can easily slide down the slope to distasteful practices.

  31. No little-girl cupcakes and no education? by erroneus · · Score: 1

    Sometimes I am annoyed that the word "too" exists. Change the spelling so that the different meaning stands out. Not like context wouldn't play a role there. But in cases like these, I think there aren't enough "o"s in "Too much" or "Too far" or "Too stupid."

  32. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, it's amazing that you've lumped everyone into "cyberlibertarian". So now I can't be upset about an idiotic bureaucracy without being labelled?

    What about the stupidity of the DMV or IRS? I certainly hope that we don't tolerate incompetence in fear of being called libertarian. Oh and about tolerance...it doesn't mean accepting crapah...nevermind, I doubt this is going anywhere.

    -Just another friendly progressive.

  33. I'm going to start Rock Fantasy Camp.. by ThatsDrDangerToYou · · Score: 1

    What are the regulations regarding wilderness survival camps? What about rock & roll fantasy camps? Is he going to start going after knitting retreats?

    Dude, don't steal my idea. In my Rock Stah Academy, students will all sit in my Mom's basement for 8 weeks talking about how they are going to get discovered. Maybe I will teach them how to write a few tunes, or maybe we'll all just sit around and smoke weed. Then I will get them ready to launch their super awesome careers by teaching them how to apply for food stamps and work in fast food jobs. Also, I will send them lots of rejection letters on (simulated) record company letterhead. For this ultimate Rock Stah Academy I will only charge $10000 for the complete course. Hurry now, space is limited in the basement!

    Yes, it's Friday...

  34. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Akratist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I do find the luv/hate libertarian thing kinda funny when these things come up. Statist sorts believe that since people are fallible, there needs to be people to regulate people. Libertarians believe that since people can't be trusted to run the lives of other people, then we need to trust individuals instead of groups. Both sorts miss the fact that the basic problem is that we recognize there are people we can't trust. Anyway, as far as regulation goes, I've gotten salmonella twice in my life, both times from large corporate food chains that were regularly inspected by the health department, had food handling standards in place, etc. I've eaten plenty of time at mom and pop greasy spoons and have not gotten sick from them. Likewise, I didn't go to a coding boot camp, but got my degree from an accredited four year college. While most of my professors were good, the guy teaching the .NET class I took had simply gone to a weekend seminar on coding in .NET and copied all the .ppt slides and used them as his own (I knew more than he did about .NET). I had another professor for calc who, while not intentionally being a fraud, absolutely could not communicate the subject matter in a way that was comprehensible. In both of these cases, I figure I was out money because of fraud, so it can happen anywhere. If the coding boot camps are making false claims, then it seems more like grounds for a hefty lawsuit by former students, than grounds for another layer of regulatory compliance, particularly when the products of the four year colleges may or may not be subject to the same type of scrutiny in terms of product quality (disclaimer -- I don't know what the process for this is in CA).

  35. Apply uniformly by Phasedshift · · Score: 1

    There are a number of training classes and "bootcamps" for various things which are based in California. Cisco Certified Internetworking Expert certification bootcamps and various others come to mind. Those bootcamps (and many others) can be many thousands of dollars.. So the question becomes, at what point do you start considering regulation for a group? When the amount of money they collect is over $X? Or when the duration of the course is over X weeks? If they are going to regulate courses at all, these need to be clearly defined and enforced uniformly. The issue here is that when it is defined too vaguely, there are a very large number of classes that should be regulated, which aren't. Cooking classes, professional certification training programs and many other classes should fall under this. Regulatory authorities in state are likely not equipped with experts in the field to be able to define what methods/requirements are "best" for every type of organization.

    With that said, I think the drawbacks of regulating classes like these, is far more than the "help" it will provide to consumers.

    * If someone is willing to drop $15,000 on a bootcamp without fully vetting it via research, references, reviews and the like, that's not very smart of them and they are partially at fault for signing up for something that didn't provide what they need/want.

    * However, if the bootcamp doesn't provide on what it promises, then they have every right to complain to the state and/or sue to get their money back (although, I expect most would complain to the state due to resource related issues.)

    In short, California either needs to clearly define exactly who should be regulated, and they should apply that uniformly, not just on a specific group of companies.

    -Phasedshift.

    1. Re:Apply uniformly by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      A certification boot camp at least gives you a verified credential from an outside authority at the end of the course. A "certificate of completion" for finishing a 10 week training course is a far cry from a proper Cisco certification, since the latter required a nasty test to achieve. I got a "certificate of completion" for my Java I class ages ago, which basically says nothing more than "this person paid us $150 and did the homework for eight weeks." I wouldn't have paid $15,000 for that.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    2. Re:Apply uniformly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think those regulations DON'T exist in a clearly readable format? It seems far more likely to me that the bootcamps are attempting to make a quick buck before the regulators notice their existence than the bootcamps made a concerted effort to comply with existing but unclear regulation.

      My reasoning for this is the number of defenders of these bootcamps who are libertarian and who don't think these regulations should apply--if these businesses were founded with inadequate legal counsel they may not have KNOWN they were setting up in an area of education with clearly delineated regulatory boundaries. The other thing that bears that out is the statements from the BPPE that they are interested in bringing the boot camps into compliance, not that they're interested in crushing/fining/punishing them.

  36. Re:“Our primary goal is not to collect a fin by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "We don't want money. They need to bow down and acknowledge us as Lord."

  37. Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by ErichTheRed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back in the late 90s / early 2000s, training companies were making tons and tons of money funneling people with zero computer experience through MCSE certification bootcamps. Basically, they would do the entire set of certification exams in 2 weeks, and not all of them were 100% honest to students about their chances of passing or even getting a job once they were done. These bootcamps still exist, but from what I've experienced, they're only for people who actually know the material and just need to update their skills quickly. The earlier iterations of these were definitely certification mills though. I went to one around 2001 because I wanted to update my certs. The class was split -- some of us were there to just do a quick skills upgrade, and others had obviously been suckered in by a dishonest recruiter. To get these folks to pass, instructors would give them copied exam questions to study and pay for these students' extra chances to pass the exams. The school would then be able to tout their super-high pass rate for the exams. And these weren't cheap either -- some were $7K or $8K in 1990s dollars. Even when you factor the cost of a hotel stay, meals and an instructor, the profit margin is huge.

    Now it seems that the focus is less on system admin skills and more on "web coding" like these schools are offering classes in. Seems like a perfect hook -- young students who use their iPhone or Android mobile constantly get sold the dream that they too can be the next great app writer and make millions. And it really does seem doable -- with all the web frameworks out there, there's very little a "coder" has to know about what's actually going on under the hood to make something that works. Problem is that paper MCSEs didn't work out so well when they got on the job, so I doubt these classes will help mint genius developers either. My boot camp class back in the day had a former bus driver and someone who was fresh out of the army in an unrelated field.

    Libertarians will say it's OK for businesses to take advantage of people, but I think education is a little bit different. Selling someone thousands of dollars in classes and telling them they're equivalent to CS graduates just isn't honest, and these schools profit off peoples' naivete and sell them dreams. The state gets to regulate educational institutions, so it makes sense that they're taking a look at them. And what if it was something simple like needing to publish student outcomes or pass rates? The libertarian free market would be all excited then, because the bad ones might be weeded out if students could be bothered to do research on statistics available from regulation.

    It took ages to weed the paper MCSEs out of the workforce, and it's still not 100% complete. Every time I meet an "IT professional" who has no troubleshooting ability, I think back to these bootcamps.

    1. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      mod up. Spend any time browsing the web without an ad blocker, and you'll see tons of ads like "Learn to be a Developer in your Spare Time".

    2. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

      Libertarians will say it's OK for businesses to take advantage of people, but I think education is a little bit different.

      I do not think it's OK for businesses to take advantage of people, and think that the people who engage in the kinds of practices you're talking about should be prosecuted for fraud:
      1. Students are defrauded, because they're told that passing these courses will get them good jobs. They're not infrequently induced to go into debt to pay for them based on these fraudulent claims.
      2. Whoever employs the "graduates" is defrauded, because they believed that they would be getting someone certifiably competent when they are in fact not.
      3. Whatever organization created the certification is defrauded, because the value of their certificate depends on the quality of the people who pass the certification exam. If someone becomes, say, an RHCE, and doesn't know how to manage a Red Hat server, that makes the RHCE worthless because employers will figure out that it's worthless, and then better employees will figure out that it's worthless and then the value of the entire program disappears.

      There are also lots of scams going on in the for-profit higher education industry as well, and it's also based on the myth that somebody with an 2-year degree from ITT Tech or University of Phoenix is on even the same playing field as someone with a B.S. from MIT or Stanford. Seriously, look at their ads, and that's exactly what they're selling prospective students.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    3. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Libertarians will NEVER say it's OK for businesses to take advantage of people. In What it Means to be a Libertarian, Charles Murray clearly states, "...the libertarian ethic is simple but stark ... thou shalt not deceive or defraud." Fraud and deceit are not accepted by Libertarians.

      Libertarianism promotes freedom from the majority of government regulation but NOT anarchy. In a Libertarian state there would be strong and effective civil courts to protect the consumers against institutions that aren't "100% honest to students about their chances of passing or even getting a job once they were done."

    4. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Valdrax · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Libertarianism promotes freedom from the majority of government regulation but NOT anarchy. In a Libertarian state there would be strong and effective civil courts to protect the consumers against institutions that aren't "100% honest to students about their chances of passing or even getting a job once they were done."

      The main problem with a Libertarian ideal state is that it implicitly argues that all deterrence against fraud and other injuries to the public must be in the form of after-the-fact damage control via the courts (in which case the question of "How much justice can you afford?" frequently comes up) instead of by proactive government action.

      The purpose of regulation like this is to prevent people from being injured in the first place, because while they *might* be able to recover damages in court, and it *might* even break even financially, the opportunity costs are forever gone for those people. Worse, damage control is almost always more expensive than prevention, and some forms of damage simply can never be made up by the courts, as with birth defects caused by thalidomide or from Love Canal. It's better to prevent harm than to clean it up after.

      Courts simply do not work as a one size fits all means of deterring bad behavior.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    5. Re: Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ottawa and others gives real hands on skills and for stuff like desktop / Sysadmin job MIT is skill gap loaded theory based classes

    6. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      I went to an MSCE "bootcamp" to get mine in Windows 2000 (back in 2001). It was provided by a real university (I will not name to preserve my anonymity). I would say your assessment is correct; in that half of the people there either had no experience at all, or they just wanted something to pad their resume with and learn a few new things on the side. The later was me. An MSCE is really best for those that already have a strong troubleshooting background that's also tasked in the role of system administration of existing Windows networks. At the very least, an MSCE holder with little experience is best taking a job where a new network is being built from the ground up. At least best practices would be adhered too, and generally the network would be small to begin with. As the network becomes more complex as required, the employee can grow with it.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    7. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by iamhigh · · Score: 2

      As another /.er stated recently, do you realized how many courts would be needed for this libertarian ideal? The government would be just as big as it is now, therefore requiring just as much money and therefore wielding just as much power. But they would all be judges... you know those "activist" judges that right-wingers (cousins of the libertarians) always complaint about.

      Not only that, it would make it so that the poor guy trying to find a job to support his family has to sue the company that took his last few thousand out of the account. The rich would have such a major advantage in this "take everyone to court" society you dream of...

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    8. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >In a Libertarian state there would be strong and effective civil courts to protect the consumers against institutions....

      Which is a bigger pipe dream than communism. Using the courts for regulatory enforcement is like using the ER as a primary care provider. Only a fucking moron would think either was a good idea.

    9. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of people got fucked in the Love Canal. Libertarians live in some fantasy world where corporations are caring and good and would never harm people in order to make a profit.

    10. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main problem with a Libertarian ideal state is that it implicitly argues that all deterrence against fraud and other injuries to the public must be in the form of after-the-fact damage control via the courts (in which case the question of "How much justice can you afford?" frequently comes up) instead of by proactive government action.

      Bullshit.

      The only restraint is the pro-active efforts be peaceful and not coercive. "Government" is just an artificial distinction we make (artificial because its nature and actions can be good or evil). As understood, a government can engage in peaceful activity just as a corporation can be jack-booted thugs.

      Please don't talk of the "Libertarian ideal state" when it is clear your only intent is to lie and undercut the principles of liberty. Instead, tell us about your utopian socialist state or whatever nonsense you believe and maybe we will see more commonality in the underlying principles. Asshole.

    11. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

      You have some points, but I'm not aware of the claim that these "boot camps" were telling people they were the equivalent of CS grads. So. Right there I have to call bullshit.

      I have met plenty of CS grads that turn their noses up at the MS certs.

      "Boot Camps" for MCSE's existed for the purpose of getting people to pass the MS cert exams through Sylvan testing in a relatively short period of time. If you didn't have the background and experience to enter into a two week program for 10-15K, then there was nobody to blame but yourself.

      This isn't a "Libertarian" vs. whatever dipshit idealist thing at all.

      Now, the issue of the state regulating institutions is really a separate issue. MCSE boot camps were never represented in any way as institutions. We do, however, have scads of fake commercial "Universities" constantly advertising and suckering in people they straddle with debt that don't get regulated by the state at all, and really offer very little of use. So for the state to so utterly fail to protect the public in that regard seems to me a very real failing.

      Real Universities will take people's money regardless of if you can pass courses or secure employment, so in a very real way it all seems pretty questionable to me, and making the whole thing out to be a horse shit "Libertarian" vs. whatever moronic other thing you think you are is just a huge distraction. The system is broken, and retards are not going to fix it.

    12. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main problem with a Libertarian ideal state is that it implicitly argues that all deterrence against fraud and other injuries to the public must be in the form of after-the-fact damage control via the courts (in which case the question of "How much justice can you afford?" frequently comes up) instead of by proactive government action.

      why does proactive action need to be governent action?
      with the advent of yelp and other online resources due diligence isn't exactly that hard.

      how about getting governemnts to improve the resources avalaible for people to proactively protect themselves, instead of adding yet another bureaucratic layer to yet another activity?

    13. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Valdrax · · Score: 1

      The only restraint is the pro-active efforts be peaceful and not coercive. "Government" is just an artificial distinction we make (artificial because its nature and actions can be good or evil). As understood, a government can engage in peaceful activity just as a corporation can be jack-booted thugs.

      Then define "peaceful." Is the arrest power of the police considered peaceful or inherently violent? Gotta start from first principles here. Libertarians often have a very different definition of that from most people, so I don't want to assume here.

      Please don't talk of the "Libertarian ideal state" when it is clear your only intent is to lie and undercut the principles of liberty. Instead, tell us about your utopian socialist state or whatever nonsense you believe and maybe we will see more commonality in the underlying principles. Asshole.

      I don't believe in utopias. All utopias are founded on a fundamental, unrealistic idealism about human nature. The world is populated by people, and people are an uneven mixture of good and bad traits. Any system that relies on people to be good is doomed to fail, just as any system that assumes all people will be bad is destined to create misery.

      The answer is always balance and moderation. We don't live in a perfect system, but the American system of checks and balances is a fundamentally good idea that should be embraced in all aspects of society. Public v. private. Workers v. bosses. Employees v. customers v. shareholders. Competitors v. each other. Police v. the public. The more power you have, the most limits on how you can use that power to potentially harm others there should be, and the more you should be watched in that capacity. The converse is also true.

      --
      If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    14. Re:Remember MCSE Bootcamps? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then define "peaceful." Is the arrest power of the police considered peaceful or inherently violent?

      That's a question? Of course it is violent. And it is odd that you assign "arrest power" to the police and not the people. I agree such restraint may be necessary and to prevent an even more violent escalation (e.g., lynch mob seeking an accused rapist) and to allow - hopefully - due process to occur.

      Restrained arrest is not peaceful. It is at best necessary and ought to be limited to prevent or reconcile even more violent actions (rape, murder, assault).

      Let me give an example of peaceful vs coercive. The city contracts with a trash hauler. Rather than mandating its use, allow the citizens to opt for their own hauler or to take the garbage themselves to the dump. So the city can engage in contracts and commerce, but can't bind its citizens to the same. Hopefully this leads to people paying a closer-to-true cost for services received (and avoid the incentive for kickbacks).

      By way of example, I pay the same amount for trash pickup as a single guy who puts out 1 bag (often modestly filled) once a month as a family of 7 that puts out a mountain of trash every week. Much of that family's trash could be reduced by separating (recycling), composting, et cetera. When I put out my aluminum cans bin, often a scrapper gets them before the hauler.

      As is, I subsidize people who throw out more trash. Ideally, I should be able to opt out. Hell, I could just take that one bag/month to work which has collection 100x more efficient than the local hauler. I know the guys who collect aluminum. I know the guys who collect cardboard. This isn't fucking rocket science yet I subsidize by force the people who waste the most.

  38. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by cultiv8 · · Score: 0

    So, what does compliance involve? That's the first question we should be asking.

    No, the first question we should be asking is why regulators are targeting these specific companies and not going after companies that provide 2-3 day training seminars that frequently cost the same amount.

    --
    sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
  39. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Until one of these poorly educated individuals ends up working for a company that produces "high security" applications and they fuck it up 'cause they didn't actually learn anything while getting their certificate, then suddenly you got a few million stolen identities floating around or something.

  40. Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I support this wholeheartedly!

    PS. I'm from Europe.

  41. Similar Programs? Any ones for employed people? by itwasgreektome · · Score: 1

    I never even knew these programs exist. My goal is to get back into development. I'm working in a completely unrelated field, having a Major in Cognitive Science and minor in computing. Anyone know of similar programs to these in the Los Angeles area for fully employed people, at cheaper prices? I love the idea of these programs...thanks!

  42. control freaks need more control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    massive disobedience required

  43. Re:Postsecondary Education? Description fits the b by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Statist.

  44. Quick Fix.. by LVSlushdat · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Here's a quick fix.. Move OUT of that bat-shit insane state.. Then let those insane asylum inmates running that state try to shut you down.. These coding academies are pretty much web-based anyway, so all they have *in* California are the offices.. Those could quickly be moved out to say, Texas or Nevada, with little or no impact on the company.. I was born and raised in California, but the wife and I got out of there in the mid-90s, and moved to Nevada. Unfortunantly, we still have relatives there, so I have to make trips yearly to that nuthouse...

    --
    THANK YOU, Edward Snowden!! Americans owe you a debt of gratitude (whether they know it or not..)
    1. Re:Quick Fix.. by csumpi · · Score: 1

      Much easier. Incorporate in Delaware. Like Apple, Pixar, Disney and all other businesses that make money.

  45. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Smidge204 · · Score: 2

    I had the same question and started clicking around. I came up with this:

    http://www.bppe.ca.gov/lawsreg...

    Just browsing through the dense wall of legalese, it seems largely related to being clear (and documented) in purpose and intent, having structured hierarchy of responsibility, good record keeping practices, providing appropriate resources (access to staff, libraries/labs, equipment etc), having clearly defined financial policies in place, making sure your faculty is competent and up to date on their subject matter, have clearly defined admission standards, etc.

    I don't see anything particularly onerous in these requirements.
    =Smidge=

  46. Caveat emptor by countvlad · · Score: 1

    Those bootcamps promising/guaranteeing certain performance can all be sued for fraud if they fail to live up to those promises/guarantees. For all the rest...caveat emptor.

    1. Re:Caveat emptor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the cost is transferred to the judicial branch to manage the lawsuits for "fraud" from the 1% that doesn't get placement.

  47. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Respect mah authoritah!

  48. Re: If they charge $15,000 for a ten week course.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In principle, yes, but since we are generally talking about small amounts, it isn't worth the effort.

  49. Time for an IT / Tech apprenticeship system by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Time for an IT / Tech apprenticeship system that can be a good way to train people while at least keeping from being an outright cash cow with all kinds of marking BS about jobs that you will get and why you should pay 50K+ to go to classes hear.

    1. Re:Time for an IT / Tech apprenticeship system by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      That's actually what my old office did. Small tech shop that serviced hospitals. The owner and the general manager were grizzled veterans who had had enough and decided to open their own business together some 15 years ago. At first, they tried to hire people with a ton of certs and pay them the going rate, but they found that the skills people had were not as advertised and their customer service skills were zilch. So they took a different tack and started hiring part time students from the university - not necessarily CS majors, but people who had a fair amount of tech aptitude but no formal experience. Most importantly, they hired based on personality. After a year, most of the folks at the shop were prepared to take the A+ exam and pass on the first try (and the company would pay for it.) Instead of paying for a boot camp, they were paid to learn.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    2. Re:Time for an IT / Tech apprenticeship system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah a system like that will not be rife with exploitation and underpayment for work they used to pay a full time person to do!

    3. Re:Time for an IT / Tech apprenticeship system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then how will the tech industry lobby for more H1-B visa workers?

  50. I have a solution. by Lumpy · · Score: 1, Troll

    Step 1 - all politicians need to be registered and certified. Letting someone practice politics unlicensed is highly dangerous.
    Step 2 - monthly testing for IQ, education and sanity. If they fail any of these they get a warning by being locked in public stockades naked and the public encouraged to throw rotten fruit and veggies at them.
    Step 3 - Did they learn anything? If no, go back to step 2 until they do.
    Step 5 - if found corrupt or working against the people or the constitution, they forfeit all personal property and wealth immediately and are thrown in the stockades again but allow the people to now use rocks until their trial, after trial hard labor camp for 30 years.

    No death penalty, they need to serve as a warning to others when you try and pass laws that go against the constitution or are for a special interest.

    Special case 1 - if a special interest is found to be involved is a corporation, that corporation is to be put to death and liquidated immediately, it's board and executives all put in stockades and allow the public to do what they want to them. Then to hard labor camp with their friend.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:I have a solution. by Rufty · · Score: 1

      Step 4 - Sell rotten fruit and profit!

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    2. Re:I have a solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see the Rich entitled people are out moderating. The French had their revolution done right, Hang to death all the rich and politicians in the public square.

  51. Re:No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authori by mattie_p · · Score: 2

    Federal law normally preempts state law, in cases where both jurisdictions have an interest. However, the courts have generally allowed states to provide more specific regulations so long as they meet the requirements of the federal law. Two examples.

    Consider minimum wage laws. The US Government requires a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour. Many states and jurisdictions require a higher wage, and are fully allowed to do so, because whatever rate they set above $7.25 meets the requirements of the federal minimum wage law.

    Consider emissions standards. The EPA sets emission standards for the country as a whole, but, in practice, California does. Because the California standards meet the minimum requirements of the federal statute, they can set more strict standards.

  52. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by dbc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    None of the things you mention in your post are quantified. Is every single one of them up to the abritrary personal judgement of a beaurocrat? Is there an appeal mechanism spelled out?

  53. Re:Similar Programs? Any ones for employed people? by ThatsDrDangerToYou · · Score: 2

    Start with some free online courses. I just started a freebie through Coursera (it's a regular freshman EE course, which is great, but.. news flash: homework still kinda sucks :-)). If you want to get more serious, you can try a local community college. The best advice is to start with free or cheap options, because now there are plenty of those that will get your feet wet.

  54. Terrible Business Climate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The business climate in California is so bad that rain doesn't even go there anymore.

  55. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    wasting your money on a class is nobody's business but your own.

    It is everybody's business because 1. They could be making fraudulent claims about job placement and policing fraud is a job for government. 2. They could be taking money for inferior education, also a form of fraud.

    If the government doesn't take care of this, what are you going to do? Read their Yelp reviews? Yeah, 10% of $15,000/student could do a lot to make their reviews look good. Why stop there? Charge more. 20% of $20,000/student and not only are their reviews good, they're damn stellar. Why, you'd be a fool not to attend and if you dare say anything negative there's another 10% coming out of the top line for lawyers to keep you gagged up in court.

    Of course they could buy judges and officials with that money too. Then, and only then, should you be raging about the government, and not to destroy it but to fix it. The libertarian solution to regulatory capture is destroying government. This is like deciding to destroy all the cars because they don't get perfect mileage.

  56. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what code reviews are for, and no one developer is ever writing a 'high security' application that is used to protect the identities of millions of people.

  57. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, it's amazing that you've lumped everyone into "cyberlibertarian". So now I can't be upset about an idiotic bureaucracy without being labelled?

    What about the stupidity of the DMV or IRS? I certainly hope that we don't tolerate incompetence in fear of being called libertarian. The real question we should be asking is why BPPE believes these coding bootcamps should be regulated. Why?

    -Just another friendly progressive.

  58. Kalifornia by zerofoo · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Is there any business that Kalifornia doesn't hate?

    I'm simply amazed at the size of California's economy relative to its anti-business ways.

    1. Re:Kalifornia by csumpi · · Score: 0

      California hearts all business, as long as it can suck it dry with taxes. I'm amazed they still allow businesses that are not California incorporated.

    2. Re:Kalifornia by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      It has nice weather. The lure of 60F in January is enough to make people put up with almost anything.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    3. Re:Kalifornia by kallisti · · Score: 1

      It has nice weather. The lure of 60F in January is enough to make people put up with almost anything.

      Yeah, until you realize that the 60F sunny days we had all January mean that we're really, truly, screwed come this summer when we run out of water.

    4. Re:Kalifornia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Is there any business that Kalifornia doesn't hate?

      The reverse of that question answers your question. Is there any company that doesn't hate the people? The answer, of course, is no. They all hate us therefore we need someone to attempt to protect us from the slavery that companies are trying to impose on us. At this point, CA is the only champion we have. They are the only state that is fighting the good fight to try to make the US more like we used to be when the rest of the world respected us. The CONservatives want to return to their version of the "good ole days" where we were the property of corporations.

      > amazed at the size of California's economy

      As to the size of CA's powerhouse economy, companies come here because the smartest people in the world move here because it is the one in this hemisphere where the government fights for us. I know from travelling around the US that outside of CA the people do not respect education, free thinking, or hard work. Because the best people are here, companies still operate here even though they are more correctly regulated. It's the only place where they can find decent employees.

  59. Re:“Our primary goal is not to collect a fin by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 2

    The headline and summary are about shutting them down. The article says both sides are working towards compliance.
    I was going to post the same quote, but not to show my badge of uninformed cynicism like you. Since this was created by California law, much as someone thinks it unnecessary, it is state law. And working for compliance instead of shuttering these camps is a good thing.
    California has piles of referendum votes, so if they think regulation is not needed they can get this stricken.

    Meanwhile, this is a reasonable quote from someone charged with enforcing the law. Feel free to inform me why the sarcasm to which I responded was based in something other than the illusion of wisdom that disillusionment brings?

  60. I hope people are paying attention. by Karmashock · · Score: 0

    Anyone that thinks this sort of nonsense is new is kidding themselves. California and similar states as well as the federal government itself has been out of control for years with this sort of regulation.

    Do we NEED to have learn to code regulated? Do you want the FCC regulating the internet?

    Etc.

    Its madness. Kill it with fire.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    1. Re:I hope people are paying attention. by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      One name: Silver State Helicopters in San Diego (technically El Cajon, but close enough). In 2008, 1 year after the previous regulation of private postsecondary schools was allowed to expire, they closed their doors taking the $70,000 per student in fees that'd already been paid and leaving the students out the money, often with the student loans for the tuition hanging over their heads, with no classes and no arrangements made to deliver the training the students had paid for. They weren't the only one, either. Another private business "college" in San Diego did the same thing that same year, tuition wasn't as much but it had a lot more students and again all of them were out the tuition and the school didn't make any arrangements for delivering what the students had paid for.

      This didn't happen under the old regulations, and it stopped happening once the new regulations went into effect, because the schools' operators could be held legally liable for the costs to students. I'd say the historical record leans toward the regulations being necessary and a good thing.

    2. Re:I hope people are paying attention. by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      What you describe is merely a bad contract. People are not accustomed to such contracts and as such tend to accept bad ones. I grant it is a problem. That said, the government doesn't need to stipulate the contract. Rather, we need to bootstrap some kind of market consensus as to what a proper contract looks like for any given good or service. Then you have some mechanism where by people become familiar with the distinction. And thus parents in this case know what a reasonable private school contract looks like and what an unreasonable one looks like. End of issue.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    3. Re:I hope people are paying attention. by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      It isn't "merely" a bad contract. Suppose the contract did have a provision in it requiring the school to refund the tuition. What good does that do? The student can go to court and get a judgement, but the school's still closed, the classes still having happened, and the money's still gone with nothing in the school's assets to pay any judgement out of. And no contract terms in the world will prevent the operators from just pulling up stakes and skipping town with the money,

      This is why the scam artists hate the regulations so much. Among other things, they require the school to set aside a fund, held in a separate bank account and untouchable by the school for any other purpose, dedicated to covering tuition refunds if for any reason the school can't make good on it's end of the bargain. The scam artists can still pull up stakes and bug out, but they can't take the money with them.

    4. Re:I hope people are paying attention. by Karmashock · · Score: 1

      Which is why businesses can do that to each other all the time when other businesses file contracts with them.

      According to you, a contract is just a license to f' someone.

      Yet that isn't how it works. So clearly contracts can be constructed in such a way that that doesn't happen.

      Is it flawless? Nothing is flawless. Your government regulated system isn't flawless. The only difference between what you said and what I said is that you want the government to write the contract.

      That's the only difference. So under your own idea the school could have done the exact same thing if they were willing to violate a contract.

      Please be sensible.

      --
      I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
    5. Re:I hope people are paying attention. by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 1

      You miss two points:

      1. You shouldn't need to be an expert in contract law and negotiation to learn to be a helicopter pilot or take classes at a private business college. The regulations are there to give a standard framework so students don't already have to be lawyers.

      2. No contract can prevent one party from breaching it. They can only provide remedies after the fact, and that's no use if the party you could get anything out of is long gone and can't be found. Regulation can do things like force the creation of a separate account with the state limiting the school's access to it (ie. the bank won't let the school's operator withdraw the funds if they want to scamper) to cover refunds if the school closes. A private contract could only do the same with a bit of fairly complex escrow accounts, see point #1 about us not wanting students to have to already be lawyers just to take a few classes.

  61. Clean up those promises by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remove promise of 99% of them landing a programming job soon, and strongly implying they'd land one in Google, Facebook, or similar, at six-figure salary levels. Problem solved.

    Seriously, these claims stink like a scam. You can easily spend several years in top universities studying CS, and not have more than a 50% chance of landing a properly paying, permanent job at Google. They expect people that have good understanding of range of subjects, or to be truly stellar in a particular field. If you would try to go through proper CS curriculum in ten weeks, you could probably dedicate at most a day to any major field of research; and this would still demand bringing people to basic understanding of the field, which is never easy apart from true geniuses. What can be given in ten weeks is not any sort of thorough understanding, by any standards I know.

    Studying Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs in one semester is only a good start, but even that is truly like drinking from a fire hose. Just being able to cough up the money for a ten-week course is not sufficient to show you're such a gulper; almost nobody is, when unprepared.

  62. College seems like a lot of Excess Baggage by glennrrr · · Score: 1

    Speaking as someone who spent a ridiculous amount of time in college+graduate school, it seems as though learning to code, which I picked up in my spare time and I now make a living at, is something that can and should be done without the boat anchor of a college degree.

  63. FYI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California Education Code

    94800. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the
    California Private Postsecondary Education Act of 2009.

    94800.5. Whenever a reference is made to the former Private
    Postsecondary Education and Student Protection Act, the former
    Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education Reform Act of 1989, or
    the former Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 94700) of Part 59 of
    Division 10 of Title 3 of the Education Code, as it read on June 30,
    2007, by the provisions of any statute or regulation, it shall be
    construed as referring to the provisions of this chapter. Whenever a
    reference is made to the former Bureau for Private Postsecondary and
    Vocational Education by the provisions of any statute or regulation,
    it shall be construed as referring to the Bureau for Private
    Postsecondary Education.

    94801. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
          (a) In 2007, more than 400,000 Californians attended more than
    1,500 private postsecondary schools in California.
          (b) Private postsecondary schools can complement the public
    education system and help develop a trained workforce to meet the
    demands of California businesses and the economy.
          (c) Numerous reports and studies have concluded that California's
    previous attempts at regulatory oversight of private postsecondary
    schools failed to ensure student protections or provide effective
    oversight of private postsecondary schools. Previous laws and
    regulatory oversight were allowed to expire on June 30, 2007, with
    some skeletal functions, continued by urgency legislation, that were
    allowed to expire on June 30, 2008.
          (d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter
    to ensure all of the following:
          (1) Minimum educational quality standards and opportunities for
    success for California students attending private postsecondary
    schools in California.
          (2) Meaningful student protections through essential avenues of
    recourse for students.
          (3) A regulatory structure that provides for an appropriate level
    of oversight.
          (4) A regulatory governance structure that ensures that all
    stakeholders have a voice and are heard in policymaking by the new
    bureau created by this chapter.
          (5) A regulatory governance structure that provides for
    accountability and oversight by the Legislature through program
    monitoring and periodic reports.
          (6) Prevention of the deception of the public that results from
    conferring, and use of, fraudulent or substandard degrees.
          (e) The Legislature advises future policymakers to continually and
    carefully evaluate this chapter and its administration and
    enforcement. Where there are deficiencies in the law or regulatory
    oversight, the Governor and the Legislature should act quickly to
    correct them.

  64. agree or not, here is the start of the state law by KevinLaybourn · · Score: 1

    California Education code 94800. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Private Postsecondary Education Act of 2009. 94800.5. Whenever a reference is made to the former Private Postsecondary Education and Student Protection Act, the former Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education Reform Act of 1989, or the former Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 94700) of Part 59 of Division 10 of Title 3 of the Education Code, as it read on June 30, 2007, by the provisions of any statute or regulation, it shall be construed as referring to the provisions of this chapter. Whenever a reference is made to the former Bureau for Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education by the provisions of any statute or regulation, it shall be construed as referring to the Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education. 94801. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (a) In 2007, more than 400,000 Californians attended more than 1,500 private postsecondary schools in California. (b) Private postsecondary schools can complement the public education system and help develop a trained workforce to meet the demands of California businesses and the economy. (c) Numerous reports and studies have concluded that California's previous attempts at regulatory oversight of private postsecondary schools failed to ensure student protections or provide effective oversight of private postsecondary schools. Previous laws and regulatory oversight were allowed to expire on June 30, 2007, with some skeletal functions, continued by urgency legislation, that were allowed to expire on June 30, 2008. (d) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter to ensure all of the following: (1) Minimum educational quality standards and opportunities for success for California students attending private postsecondary schools in California. (2) Meaningful student protections through essential avenues of recourse for students. (3) A regulatory structure that provides for an appropriate level of oversight. (4) A regulatory governance structure that ensures that all stakeholders have a voice and are heard in policymaking by the new bureau created by this chapter. (5) A regulatory governance structure that provides for accountability and oversight by the Legislature through program monitoring and periodic reports. (6) Prevention of the deception of the public that results from conferring, and use of, fraudulent or substandard degrees. (e) The Legislature advises future policymakers to continually and carefully evaluate this chapter and its administration and enforcement. Where there are deficiencies in the law or regulatory oversight, the Governor and the Legislature should act quickly to correct them.

  65. Re:Flea markets? ANY cash transaction? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    There's lots of transactions that are not really regulated, especially cash ones...

    Really? Try paying your $20 dinner tab with a ten dollar bill. Just because there's not a form to fill out doesn't mean it's free of regulation.

  66. Re:Similar Programs? Any ones for employed people? by itwasgreektome · · Score: 1

    Thanks! I've seen some pretty cool online courses (and I regularly take community college courses, but the programming ones fill up quick) but I'm the type where I need the stress of a physical instructor to make me succeed. It would be stupid to say I wish I was unemployed so I could do a program like this, but I wish there was one like it that allowed employed people, and at a lesser price. :-)

  67. Competence. by westlake · · Score: 1

    California, possibly the state that receives the biggest benefit from programmers (in the form of jobs and taxes paid)

    What California needs are programmers with genuine talents and marketable skills. Not the diploma mill boot camp.

  68. I side with the regulators on this one. by wcrowe · · Score: 1

    I know a lot of people here are upset about this, but this is one case where I have to side with the regulators. There is a big reason why such regulation is necessary. There was a time, not so many years ago, when there were a lot of fly-by-night trade schools operating. They would promise training in technical fields, like programming, and then teach courses using outdated equipment and software. Students would pay thousands of dollars to go to these schools, only to discover later on that their skills and certifications were worthless. I have seen this happen. There may still be schools like this around, I don't know. Without regulation, anyone can set up a school for anything, promising excellent education and lucrative careers, while delivering worthless training.

    --
    Proverbs 21:19
    1. Re:I side with the regulators on this one. by PPH · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you. But are any regulators really in a position to evaluate skills and certifications in today's rapidly changing and fragmented world of software? If not, this just becomes an exercise in rubber stamp regulation. If the schools do have to do a lot of compliance work to certify their curriculum, then the cost to update it may be so high that they keep teaching the same stuff year after year. Because it was approved.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  69. Don't see the problem by Phoeniyx · · Score: 1

    If they are trying to shut down non-profit or free institutions, that's one thing. But these programs appear to be "for profit" institutions. They should get "some" kind of regulation..

  70. Missing the point by kelemvor4 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Other posters seem to think this is centered around making sure the schools are on the up and up. I think it's simply a money grab by the State of california. Here's the law, taken right from their website:

    94930. Deposit of Fees, Adjustment of Fees, Reserve Balance
    (a) All fees collected pursuant to this article, including any interest on those fees, shall be deposited in the Private Postsecondary Education Administration Fund, and shall be available, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for expenditure by the bureau for the administration of this chapter.
    (b) If the bureau determines by regulation that the adjustment of the fees established by this article is consistent with the intent of this chapter, the bureau may adjust the fees. However, the bureau shall not maintain a reserve balance in the Private Postsecondary Education Administration Fund in an amount that is greater than the amount necessary to fund six months of authorized operating expenses of the bureau in any fiscal year.

    94930.5. Fee Schedule
    An institution shall remit to the bureau for deposit in the Private Postsecondary Education Administration Fund the following fees, in accordance with the following schedule:
    (a) The following fees shall be remitted by an institution submitting an application for an approval to operate, if applicable:
    (1) Application fee for an approval to operate: five thousand dollars ($5,000).
    (2) Application fee for the approval to operate a new branch of the institution: three thousand dollars ($3,000).
    (3) Application fee for an approval to operate by means of accreditation: seven hundred fifty dollars ($750).
    (b) The following fees shall be remitted by an institution seeking a renewal of its approval to operate, if applicable:
    (1) Renewal fee for the main campus of the institution: three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500).
    (2) Renewal fee for a branch of the institution: three thousand dollars ($3,000).
    (3) Renewal fee for an institution that is approved to operate by means of accreditation: five hundred dollars ($500).
    (c) The following fees shall apply to an institution seeking authorization of a substantive change to its approval to operate, if applicable:
    (1) Processing fee for authorization of a substantive change to an approval to operate: five hundred dollars ($500).
    (2) Processing fee in connection with a substantive change to an approval to operate by means of accreditation: two hundred fifty dollars ($250).
    (d) (1) In addition to any fees paid to the bureau pursuant to subdivisions (a) to (c), inclusive, each institution that is approved to operate pursuant to this chapter shall remit both of the following:
    (A) An annual institutional fee, in an amount equal to three-quarters of 1 percent of the institution's annual revenues derived from students in California, but not exceeding a total of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) annually.
    (B) An annual branch fee of one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each branch or campus of the institution operating in California.
    (2) The amount of the annual fees pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be proportional to the bureau's cost of regulating the institution under this chapter.
    (e) If the bureau determines that the annual cost of providing oversight and review of an institution, as required by this chapter, is less than the amount of any fees required to be paid by that institution pursuant to this article, the bureau may decrease the fees applicable to that institution to an amount that is proportional to the bureau's costs associated with that institution.

    94931. Late Payment
    (a) A fee that is not paid on or before the 30th calendar day after the due date for the payment of the fee shall be subject to a 25 percent late payment penalty fee.
    (b) A fee that is not paid on or before the 90th calendar day after the due date for payment of the fee shall be subject to a 35 percent late paymen

    1. Re:Missing the point by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      I am SHOCKED that when you quote only the fee schedule all you see is the schedule of fees.

      Shocked, I tell you!

  71. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by bruce_the_loon · · Score: 1

    They are documented in the regulations linked by the GP and there are clearly documented compliance and appeals processes in there as well. It's a hell of a read though.

    --
    Trying to become famous by taking photos. Visit my homepage please.
  72. Re:“Our primary goal is not to collect a fin by westlake · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a real charmer...

    The bureaucrat isn't paid to be charming. He is being paid to be independent, honest and effective. Otherwise what you get is the politically motivated closing of the GWB.

  73. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  74. Ha Ha Ha Ha - yeah right, fuck you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad you don't get to just say "Oh dear heavens, someone is out there doing something, and I'm not getting my unfair cut!"

    Sorry charlie, you don't get to say something is under your jurisdiction just because you wanna.

    Are you going to stamp out "Online Knitting" or "Yodeling for Yokels" classes? Of course you aren't you malignent tumuscent puss bucket.

    So get the fuck off the online or in person "Learn to program" classes - they are not colleges or schools, but guided self-help organizations.

    Sheesh.

    What a bunch up goons.

  75. go underground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Americans went underground to get their alcohol during prohibition.
    Remember speak-easys?

    Now you will have give the secret password to get in and learn to program a computer.
    Here come the feds to bust of computer labs everywhere.

  76. Can someone explain the Learn to Program movement by morgauxo · · Score: 1

    I am all for teaching people and enabling those who want to do something to do so. But why make a movement out of teaching every kid to program? How will the world be a better place if everyone knows some programming?

    I see two things coming from this:
    more amateur programmers
    more professional programmers

    Are more amateur programmers a good thing? If you are a programmer, ask yourself this. Have you ever had to take over a large project which was begun by an amateur programmer? Have you had to make the decision between continuing to patch crappy unplanned spaghetti code or take time you don't have to start from scratch on something that already has heavy use and needs fixes and / or new features yesterday?

    Are more professional programmers a good thing? Many businesses seem to claim so as they push for laxer rules in bringing in cheap foreign labor. Is that anything more than BS though? How many colleges are there out there graduating whole classes of CS majors every semester? Yes, I understand, they want people with experience. There can't be anyone with experience until someone hires somebody without it though. This isn't an exclusive problem for computer programming, it is true for any profession that requires any experience. If companies can get more experienced employees by bringing them in from foreign lands then answer this... where are the foreigners getting their experience? Who hired them first?

    What will more professional programmers really mean? Just more competition for programming jobs. Before smuggly thinking "that's ok I am really good" remember this... that may be true but you are still replaceable. More competition means you are more replaceable. That means you will work longer hours for less money and benefits. You will do it because if you don't someone else will! You didn't like money did you? You didn't want to have a life did you? Surely you don't expect to retire some day!

    Please don't get me wrong. I'm not really selfish enough to want to discourage people from learning to program. I want to live in a world where everyone has a chance to do what they want to do and someone is willing to teach them to do it. I just don't like the idea of making it a required class that every child must take. I also don't think computer programming should be acceptable as a replacement for foreign language as the two have NOTHING to do with one another and while programming does help one develop their thinking skils such as logic, math and planning it does NOT help one develop the same kind of thinking skills that a foreign language provides. They are entirely different animals! /rant

  77. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what does compliance involve? That's the first question we should be asking.

    The first question I'm asking is how my hot dogs are any of your business. If you want certified-safe meat, then you should pay for the certification process yourself like Jews have for millennia.

  78. Caveat emptor is not good for training & educa by BergZ · · Score: 1

    The problem with caveat emptor, especially when it comes to education, is that the people who want to take a computer programming bootcamp are mostly the people who know the least about computer programming and are thus the least qualified to tell the difference between a scam and a legitimate computer programming syllabus.

    --
    Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
  79. WTF? by westlake · · Score: 1

    Instead, they fall under Federal Dept. of Ed Work Training facilities.

    I can't find a Google link to anything that remotely resembles whatever it is you are talking about.

  80. Lose weight with this one weird trick... by floobedy · · Score: 0

    ...which your doctor DEFINITELY DOES NOT want you to know about.

    The thing is, I think those companies will actually offer you your money back if you complain their remedy didn't work. Those companies still make money because: 1) the amount they charge is low enough that many people don't bother to go through the procedure of getting their money back; 2) confirmation bias etc will lead some people to believe the remedies helped them when they obviously didn't.

  81. What the regulation requires by floobedy · · Score: 2

    I went ahead and read the regulation, with which the "boot camps" are being forced to comply.

    The regulation is actually extremely minimal. It requires the educational institutions to pay a yearly fee ($3500) plus various other fees; it requires the educational institutions to track all their students and track who gets jobs, how soon, how long they took to graduate, and so on; it prohibits education institutions from making promises about future employment; it requires the educational institution to hire only teachers or instructors who have some kind of qualification; etc. There are also various other provisions, all of which seem very minimalistic.

    It seemed to me that most of the regulation involved requiring that schools provide certain kinds of truthful information, such as job placement rates.

    The regulation would not prevent any reasonable educational institution from operating. It would still be possible to open a "boot camp" for coding in a building you rented, provided that the instructors have some kind of qualification and you submit truthful job placement information.

    Nor would the regulation impose very much burden upon small organizations. It seems to me that the cost of compliance would be fairly small.

  82. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nentindo solved this non-sense back in the 90s. If a company complies with your regulations, give them your 'gold star'. If they don't, don't give them the star. If people want to buy from vendors that don't have the mark of approval, it's their money leave them to it. If someone lies, they can be taken to court on fraud. If, on the other hand, they are able to produce better results without using the government sanctioned methods, then maybe its time to revamp those methods.

  83. Exemptions by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2

    Exemptions to the CPPEA 2009. Notice the big one: schools charging a tuition of $2500 or less. That should outright exempt a lot of places once they file the right paperwork. The target of these regulations isn't the small places or pay-as-you-go classes. It's places like Silver State Helicopters that take in large tuition payments and then evaporate without delivering classes. That's why the regulations are light on teacher qualifications and heavy on the financial aspects of the schools and their owners including things like the required tuition recovery funds.

  84. Re:“Our primary goal is not to collect a fin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We don't want money, we want them to stop screwing naive or desperate high school grads with their deceptive educational claims."

  85. For what it's worth . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm a student at Hack Reactor. I was pretty cynical about that 99% hiring rate number before I started here, but now I tend to believe it's accurate. I say that based on what I've seen from the graduates of the last 2 classes. As far as I can tell, everyone in the class that graduated 10 weeks ago has a job and everyone I've talked to from the group that graduated in December seems to be getting job interviews and having success moving forward in their job search.

    The trick isn't in how they do the math. If there's a trick to it, it's that:

    * Admissions are pretty competitive. They pick students who are likely to be successful.

    * They have chosen the right niche. It's all JavaScript all the time around here. There's a huge shortage of good JavaScript developers in the valley. A lot of companies see value in having someone who knows a bunch about JavaScript and is clearly highly motivated to learn even if they're weaker in data structures or some of the other areas.

    * The numbers are small right now. Hack Reactor is only 14 months old. There's only something like 120 HR graduates in the job market.

    But, and I'm in the minority around here on this, I also think coding schools should be regulated. CA passed a law to tighten regulation of trade schools in 2009 because there were lots of scams going on- a lot of bogus CNA training programs and cooking schools, etc. That law makes sense.

    And if there's a law that regulates trade schools, it seems like it should apply to coding schools just as much as sound engineering programs, barber colleges and cooking schools. Creating loopholes in a good law for one industry that thinks its special seems like a bad idea.

    Besides a little regulation will add legitimacy to a young industry and keep scam artists from moving into the space. There will be some compliance costs (paperwork is a hassle!), but I can't see it being much more than that.

  86. Re:All the cyberlibertarian rage... wrong question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are seriously judging this on Smidge's one-sentence summary of a large body of regulation? You fucking moron.

  87. Re: all transactions should be regulated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello,
    I'm going to get modded down for this, but California has the absolute right to regulate any and all educational institutions, and in my humble opinion, any and all transactions as well. Why should yard sales be exempt? After all, sales taxes need to be paid with every transaction, and if there was a system of cashless transactions, where every purchase had to go through the government, this would ensure that all proper taxes were paid and all proper legalities were obeyed. Freeloading tax cheats have been gaming the system to their own ends for far too long, and it's about time all proper taxes were paid when due, and this absolutely includes flea market sales, yard sales, even bake sales. Furthermore, in these places, many laws have been broken, and as a result, people were hurt. How many kids died from peanut allergies from "simple" bake sales?? Unless records are kept and laws obeyed, no one can ever know, and proper safety precautions can never be instituted through regulation and proper preemptive government action. And since hackers often learn to code through code boot camps, in a similar way that the 9/11 terrorists learned to fly at flight schools, should we not perform government-approved screening for all individuals who wish to learn these techniques? After all, we must think of the children, as well as everyone else, to maintain a safe society. In all honesty, these types of computer camps must all be shut down, and those who wish to learn computer programming, upon passing government standards to receive the proper permissions, are certainly able to do so in a government approved educational institution, whereby they can pay the full value of said education, which itself would be government approved, with proper oversight, so as to avoid the many hacking cases that have already happened recently.

    Yes, I know that many will disagree with proper safeguards and oversight, but if you haven't done anything wrong and you have nothing to hide, there is no reason why you should be troubled by these standards. and if you have, then you have no business participating in a highly technical, peaceful society. Perhaps another society with less "safeguards" would be better suited to you.

  88. Re:Flea markets? ANY cash transaction? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually they are regulated. You are under obligation to report all cash income on your taxes as well as voluntarily report in any sales tax owed to your home state (main reason to try and force an internet tax)

    Its just completely impractical to prove/enforce.

  89. Re:No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authori by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about the states with no minimum wage?

  90. When the fee is prohibitive by tepples · · Score: 1

    maybe you should figure out if it's something as simple as them having hygiene standards for how he cooks, and some small fee for a license.

    Or maybe the hot dog stand is such a small-time operation that "some small fee" is prohibitive. This has happened before with lemonade stands run by children. (Google lemonade stand prosecution.)

  91. A license may be very easy to get ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets say I teach some kids to play the piano in my spare time, do I really have to be licensed.

    Depends on what the license involves. Does it mean you have had a criminal background check, you have insurance coverage, you have a fire extinguisher?

    I have a license to do business in my home. Once a year I go onto my city website, answer a few questions, and give then a credit card number to bill for $150. A license shows up in the mail.

  92. Nothing more than guild creation by tranquilidad · · Score: 1

    I dropped out of college back in 1983 but did very well in the computer science classes I took. After dropping out I started tutoring computer science students at a rate of $10/hour for a little scratch. My tutored students did very well on their projects and exams and I soon had a growing list of students interested in my services.

    What scares me about these types of regulatory schemes is we are replacing the market and individual choice and responsibility with government oversight that is incapable or uninterested in measuring results. Rather than allowing the market to decide on a product based on results we are implementing entry thresholds to be sure the "right people" are delivering the services. However, when we seek to abdicate all market responsibility to the government we simply create a set of rules so that our educators look the way the government wants them to look.

    Some argue that the government should have the power to regulate because some of these students are using government money and that, in my opinion, is the ultimate issue. Once we start using public funds we create more opportunity for corruption. It is not longer necessary to rip off one student at a time and hope the market doesn't catch on because you can meet some bureaucratic threshold and be fed a steady stream of students who have no personal investment in the process outside of their own time.

    Once we accept regulatory schemes such as this we open ourselves up to whatever whims the bureaucrats decide upon. We'll move from meeting a threshold of requirements in order to teach to a system where the content becomes mandated.

  93. I have a PhD in Collage, you insensitive clod! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a PhD in Collage, you insensitive clod!

    From the California Institute of The Visual Arts, no less.

  94. Home of the... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    California is the home of the RIAA, MPAA, etc, all the gun control supporters, the corporations that want immunity, the politicians that want all control, and not to mention the home of M13, Kings, Crips, Bloods, etc. etc.

    Stand your ground you california pussies.

  95. Wrong? by Vrtigo1 · · Score: 1

    As usual, the title makes the story out to be something it's not. They're not trying to shut these places down, they're trying to bring them into compliance with laws and regulations.

    While I'm not in favor of excessive regulation, that doesn't mean I can just go out and start a business that ignores the rules. It sounds like the rules were in place well before any of these places existed, they started doing business and ignored the rules, now they're being told they can't do that and someone is annoyed that they're getting called out.

    In other news, I've never much cared for speed limits so I'm just going to start ignoring them because I can get home faster that way. When I get arrested I'll post a story to Slashdot about how the police are trying to destroy my life by putting me in jail.

  96. Re:Can someone explain the Learn to Program moveme by radarskiy · · Score: 1

    You have assumed that the only application of programming is being a programmer that produces programs, so the only people that program are programmers. Programming is a tool that you can use to a task. Sometimes that task is produce the program itself, sometimes the program automates the actual desired task. I write programs all of the time but I am a circuit designer, not a programmer.

  97. "Lured Into Trade School and Debt" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    A lot of "colleges" were loan scams -- qualifying students for huge tuition loans, but not graduating them with competence to get jobs to pay them back.
    The loans then got handed to the federal government to repay, and the owners of the private "colleges" kept the money.

    That's why you see more enforcement attention -- tuition loans were a money machine for scammers for quite a while.

    Here are a couple of fairly old article as that was becoming news:

    http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2009/0911.burd.html

    The Subprime Student Loan Racket
    With help from Washington, the for-profit college industry is loading up millions of low-income students with debt they'll never pay off.
    By Stephen Burd

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/14/business/14schools.html

    The New Poor
    In Hard Times, Lured Into Trade School and Debt
    One fast-growing American industry has become a conspicuous beneficiary of the recession: for-profit colleges and trade schools.
    -------
    "... many schools exaggerate the value of their degree programs, selling young people on dreams of middle-class wages while setting them up for default on untenable debts, low-wage work and a struggle to avoid poverty. And the schools are harvesting growing federal student aid dollars, including Pell grants awarded to low-income students.

    “If these programs keep growing, you’re going to wind up with more and more students who are graduating and can’t find meaningful employment,” said Rafael I. Pardo, a professor at Seattle University School of Law and an expert on educational finance. “They can’t generate income needed to pay back their loans, and they’re going to end up in financial distress.”

    For-profit trade schools have long drawn accusations that they overpromise and underdeliver, but the woeful economy has added to the industry’s opportunities along with the risks to students, according to education experts. They say these schools have exploited the recession as a lucrative recruiting device while tapping a larger pool of federal student aid...."
    -----

  98. Re:No Accredited Credential, No Regulatory Authori by jonwil · · Score: 1

    Then (per years of precedent from courts all across the land) the federal standard would apply.

  99. California & Texan electricity deregulation by mbkennel · · Score: 1


    | The California electricity crisis is a demonstration that you can screw up deregulation in a really bad way. But it's not a demonstration that deregulation is inherently bad or problematic.

    Inherently bad, no, but problematic certainly.

    Deregulation proceeded the way that free-market deregulation promoters wanted it to happen and the theoretical way it should: lowering the power of the local monopolies in favor of a (theoretically) competitive free-market. Generating assets were divorced from the consumers of them in order to create a deeper market. It turned out horribly.

    Clear failures of the application deregulatory ideology are frequently retroactively declared to be "wasn't actually deregulatory". The warnings of the opponents of deregulation, even if they turned out to be right, get ignored the next time through as well. {eventually people got wise to Communists making the same type excuses}

    The most pure 'theoretically' deregulatory environment is "let utilities do whatever they want", such as charge people extreme amounts for what are in practice essential services. Like threaten to turn off the juice to a hospital right before cardiac surgery unless they wired money to the CEO. Don't want that? Well, that will have to be regulated.

    Texas (whose companies cheated Californians out of money) politicians mocked California without any empathy. They claimed (falsely) that the problem was entirely California's 'enviro-nazi' regulations preventing supply from meeting demand during the dot-com boom. (false).

    Texas later drank its own hallucinogenic flavor-aid and deregulated its own electricity. Survey says?

    http://stateimpact.npr.org/texas/2012/01/25/electric-deregulation-turns-ten-in-texas/

    During the California crisis, municipally owned utilities (such as LA's large DWP) which had not been subject to deregulation similarly had no supply shortage and maintained stable rates.

    The argument from the opponents of electricity deregulation, namely that it is a scheme to extract money from the average user for the benefit of a small number of wealthy, private owners without any compensatory benefit, is correct.

    1. Re:California & Texan electricity deregulation by khallow · · Score: 1

      Clear failures of the application deregulatory ideology are frequently retroactively declared to be "wasn't actually deregulatory".

      By all means, let's consider these failures. Do you have one in mind?

    2. Re:California & Texan electricity deregulation by khallow · · Score: 1
      As a more in depth aside, your current examples are really weak.

      Texas has a thriving electricity generation market. Of the increased costs claimed by the study your link cites, almost 70% came from "stranded costs" payments which weren't market-based (basically paying electricity utilities for losing their monopoly status). That's almost $7 billion out of an alleged $10 billion in additional costs. More came from the cost of building wind power infrastructure.

      However, that analysis didn't appear to tell the whole story. For instance, the calculation of balancing energy savings did not account for the multi-billion dollar expense of building new transmission. Neither did it account for the increased cost of purchasing additional backup capacity, known in ERCOT as "ancillary services." ERCOT also has found separately that wind is one of the most expensive forms of power commonly used in Texas, with each megawatt of power costing $53 to generate. And if one figures in its actual operating capacity, then the cost of wind power goes to $80 per megawatt hour.

      This was another non-market cost. Looks to me like we can account for almost all of the higher costs paid by customers in the deregulated market from just these two parts that weren't market related. They were part of the deregulation process, but not actually deregulation itself.

      Texas (whose companies cheated Californians out of money) politicians mocked California without any empathy. They claimed (falsely) that the problem was entirely California's 'enviro-nazi' regulations preventing supply from meeting demand during the dot-com boom. (false).

      They were correct in that the above issues were contributing factors (they weren't "false" as you falsely claim). There were also the defective nature of the markets which allowed gaming of the market (by Enron and other generators and traders) and a remarkably disingenuous California government which interfered in the deregulation of the markets both by allowing the highly profitable Enron games to continue and by not allowing PG&E and Consolidated Edison to complete their deregulation process.

  100. Lovely by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    Ah, California ... clearly with your thriving economy and bright future, even more regulation is what you need.

  101. Red vs. Blue by westlake · · Score: 0
    Speaking to the broader issue of poverty in the states:

    According to the latest Census data, 9 of the 10 states with the lowest per-person income levels were Red: Mississippi, Arkansas, Idaho, West Virginia, Kentucky, Utah, Alabama, South Carolina and Oklahoma.

    The Census data also show that 9 of the 10 states with the lowest median household income were Red: Mississippi, Arkansas, West Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Louisiana, South Carolina and Oklahoma.

    And 9 of the 10 states with the lowest median family income were Red: Mississippi, Arkansas, West Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Louisiana and South Carolina.

    The only Blue state on each list: New Mexico.

    By the way, 9 of the 10 states with the highest per-person income voted Blue in the 2012 presidential race: Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Virginia and Washington. The only Red state on the list: Alaska.

    Our ruling

    Occupy Democrats said "Nine out of the 10 poorest states are Red states."

    Whether you look at per-person, household, or family income, nine out of the ten poorest states voted Republican in the last four presidential elections.

    The judges rule the statement is True.

    Pro-Democrat group says 9 of the 10 poorest states are Republican [Jan 12]

  102. Piano Lessons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently they are also going after several thousand piano teachers who have been providing unauthorized post-secondary education.

  103. Time to split up the nation. by bbsalem · · Score: 1

    Of course Slashdot is already a biased sample of public opinion and its polarities. I am assuming that the techies that post here already have some elitist pretentions, many of them thinking themselves superior in some way to people generally. The extremism of the dialogue reveals that. It is almost diagnostic for a Right Wing Bias since most Conservatives seem to come from that elitist POV.

    The debate about the relative power of government vs. private business, is a straw man that like every rhetorical argument protects a much weaker agenda. The idea that government vs. business, regulation vs. non-regulation is a straw man is revealed by the access business people have to legislatures and the idea that most legislators are business men, having some experience running an organization that has a self interest and makes money. Increasingly it take lots of money to run for public office and that fact hasn't much assauged the Right Wingers here. There must be something in reality that most of them miss, or they must be lying about their true motives.

    So the usual Conservative and Republican anti-government, or state's rights arguments hide a hidden agenda which is really the advantage they want for their elite to the disadvantage of those in the majority not in their elite. This is basically anti-democracy. But it is not fashionable to admit, so they have to couch it in a way that conceals the elitist ramifications which lead down the road away from inclusion of everybody to exclusion of most, to creation of oligarchies, to class war.

    Even were that not true, the antisocial element of their individualism must be then considered, for to think that one does not have to compromise one-s self interest with the interests of everybody else in society, just labeling the need to be socially interconnected as "collectiveist" reveals again an elitism that results ultimately in unfairness and a breakdown of the Social Contract. The idea of fairness is crucial here, and even though competition and merit do apply to human affaird, the perception that unfairness is institutionalized is just as repugnant as forcing everyone to be equal. Ruthless metitocracy, even assuming objective standards, which is a streatch, is just has bad as ruthless equality, both being ruthless.

    I am glad I live in California and all the more because if I would want the Red States to be out of my hair, my state could actually do quite well and maybe better without them. One solution to the political impasse and polarization much of it funded by capitalist oligarchs is succession.

  104. Re:Can someone explain the Learn to Program moveme by morgauxo · · Score: 1

    No, I think I spoke to that. I have had the misfotune of taking over many projects which started out a little things some non-programmer thought they could do to make some task easier. Over time it grows and turns into something larger and people depend on it. Well after it went over the head of the non-programmer it finally gets pushed to some programmer. Now it's a huge project where everything was done in the worst possible way to begin with and with no planning. Everything needs redone, the whole thing SHOULD be started over from scratch but it has grown into something in active use and existing users aren't going to appreciate being beta testers on the new one.