The ongoing controversy surrounding the CBSE's On-Screen Marking (OSM) platform has taken a new turn. Coempt Edu Teck, the Hyderabad-based edu tech firm responsible for the platform, has firmly stated that the recent errors reported were not due to software glitches but rather manual oversight. This revelation raises significant concerns about the reliability of digital governance in India's education sector.
Coempt processes nearly two crore answer booklets annually for over 35 institutions, emphasizing its commitment to compliance and service delivery. However, the incident where a student received another candidate's answer sheet has spotlighted the vulnerabilities in the manual processes that underpin these digital systems. Coempt's insistence on the integrity of its technology contrasts sharply with the public's growing skepticism about the efficacy of digital solutions in education.
The company has also faced scrutiny regarding security protocols after an ethical hacker claimed to have accessed parts of its platform. Coempt clarified that the breach involved a testing server, not client data, yet the incident has amplified concerns about data security and operational transparency in educational technology. With the Supreme Court previously dismissing calls for mass re-evaluation of exam results, the implications of this oversight could further erode trust in the system.



