The University of Toronto Settlement Is a Turning Point for Academic Integrity in Canada

May 22, 2026

On April 1, 2026, Justice Meaghan M. Conroy of the Federal Court of Canada issued a consent judgment confirming that the Easy EDU tutoring companies infringed the copyright of the University of Toronto and three named professors: Robert Gazzale, Lisa Kramer, and Ai Taniguchi. Joe Friesen covered the story for The Globe and Mail (paywalled, but worth tracking down). The settlement requires Easy EDU to pay $1 million in damages, plus HST and interest. A counterclaim by Easy EDU against the university was dismissed without costs. The case had been before the courts since 2022.

Friesen reported that Easy EDU reproduced course outlines, slide presentations, lecture notes, and assignments without authorization. In some instances, the company provided tests written by faculty with answers included, placing students at direct risk of academic misconduct violations. One published adjudication described how 180 students received a study package containing 22 questions that corresponded directly to questions a professor had written for an assessment. The student named in that case received a grade of zero and a 28-month suspension.

This case matters beyond copyright law and anyone who works in academic integrity in Canada should be paying attention Why? Because the case could set a precedent for how Canadian institutions respond when students use file-sharing services, term paper mills, or engage so-called academic consultants.

What the Settlement Exposes

Let’s be clear: the Easy EDU case did not emerge in isolation. The case reflects a pattern I and others have documented extensively. In Academic Integrity in Canada: An Enduring and Essential Challenge, which Julia Christensen Hughes and I edited and published with Springer in 2022, our contributors wrote about contract cheating in Canada in a number of chapters. Collectively, we traced the commercialization of academic support services as part of a broader commodification of higher education. The volume includes chapters on contract cheating in Canada and on EdTech-enabled contract cheating, both of which point to the same structural condition that made Easy EDU possible: a market for services that operates in parallel to formal education, targeting students under pressure, with few regulatory constraints.

Canada has no legislation against contract cheating companies. The U of T settlement is a copyright remedy, not a criminal one. Easy EDU was not shut down because what it did was illegal under a contract cheating statute. It was held responsible for reproducing materials that belonged to the university and its faculty. This distinction is important here because copyright law filled a gap that academic integrity policy could not. 

The Platformization of Academic Misconduct 

A recent 2026 study published in the British Educational Research Journal adds another dimension to this picture. My PhD student Gengyan Tang led this study, with Wei Cai and me as co-authors. Tang, Cai, and I examined commercial academic misconduct appeal services operating in China’s digital marketplace and found that these agencies target Chinese international students through platforms such as Xiaohongshu (RED). These services operate in a regulatory and ethical grey zone, packaging appeal support as a marketable product and translating case outcomes into metrics like success rates.

Tang, Cai, and I conceptualize this process as self-platformization: commercial actors reorganizing educational assistance in alignment with platform economies. The same logic applies to tutoring services like Easy EDU. These are not tutoring companies in any traditional sense. They are platform-aware businesses that use algorithms, social media, and scale to insert themselves into students’ academic lives at precisely the moments when students are most vulnerable.

The students in the U of T case were not, for the most part, bad actors. Many were international students navigating unfamiliar institutional systems, in some cases at risk of losing their study permits. Easy EDU identified that vulnerability and built a business model around it. One student, identified only by initials in the published adjudication, faced a 28-month suspension, not because they set out to deceive, but because a commercial service supplied unauthorized materials and they used them.

In our study, Tang, Cai, and I argue that institutions have invested heavily in prevention and detection but have largely ignored the post-violation stage. That gap is where commercial services can operate with relative ease because there is nothing stopping them from doing so. Universities focus on catching misconduct. Academic consulting services (i.e., contract cheating companies) profit from what happens next, whether that means supplying unauthorized test answers before an assessment or, as we found in our research, or coaching students through misconduct hearings afterward.

So What’s Next?

The U of T injunction permanently restrains Easy EDU from making further use of the university’s course materials. The university has committed to directing settlement proceeds toward student academic supports. These are constructive outcomes, and also insufficient on their own.

In Academic Integrity in Canada: An Enduring and Essential Challenge, I, together with other contributors, called for legislation that would deter contract cheating firms from operating in Canada. That call has gone largely unanswered. The U of T case demonstrates that copyright enforcement can achieve results where academic integrity policy alone cannot, but copyright litigation is expensive, slow, and available only to institutions with the resources to pursue it. The case took four years to resolve, an in the financial climate we are in today, many institutions simply cannot absorb that kind of cost.

What the settlement does accomplish is normative because it establishes, through a federal court consent judgment, that reproducing course materials for commercial tutoring purposes constitutes copyright infringement. It names the professors whose intellectual property was taken and affirms, as U of T vice-provost Heather Boon stated, in Friesen’s article, that faculty own the copyright in their course materials and the university will support them in protecting it. That is a meaningful public statement. It signals that institutions are prepared to act, and that the legal tools to do so exist.

The Bigger Picture

Academic integrity is not simply a student conduct problem, but rather a structural problem shaped by institutional design, assessment practice, resource inequity, and the commercialization of educational support. The Easy EDU case sits at the intersection of all of these.

The students who attended those tutoring sessions needed academic support. Easy EDU positioned itself as that help, at a price, with materials it had no right to distribute. The university’s commitment to redirecting settlement funds to student supports is the right response. It will not be enough without sustained investment and clearer procedural guidance for students facing misconduct allegations. Institutions across our country happily received international student tuition fees, on the assumption that students are admitted have the academic skills and preparation they need to succeed. By and large, we still tend to blame the students if they lack academic skills or knowledge of how to navigate the higher education system. When the students turn to third parties whom they believe can help them fill their skills gap, historically, it is the students who are held responsible while companies operating in the background simply line their pockets with profits without any repercussions. This is the first time, to my knowledge, that a commercial supplier of academic services operating in Canada has faced a monetary penalty for facilitating academic misconduct.

Better institutional supports, clearer procedural guidance for students facing misconduct allegations, and platform-aware integrity education are not peripheral concerns. They are the conditions under which commercial exploitation becomes less attractive. In our study, Tang, Cai, and I call for a post-violation framework that attends to digital infrastructures and addresses students during crisis moments, not only before them. I continue to believe that work is overdue.

Kudos to the team at U of T for pursuing this case. You’ve now set a precedent that others can follow.

References

Eaton, S. E., & Christensen Hughes, J. (Eds.). (2022). Academic integrity in Canada: An enduring and essential challenge. Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-83255-1

Friesen, J. (2026, May 22). University of Toronto reaches settlement for $1-million in damages from tutoring company. The Globe and Mail. https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-university-of-toronto-reaches-settlement-1-million-damages-tutoring  

Tang, G., Eaton, S. E., & Cai, W. (2026). Academic misconduct appeal services in China: Platform logics, self-platformization and implications for integrity education. British Educational Research Journal. https://doi.org/10.1002/berj.70130

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Sarah Elaine Eaton, PhD, is a Professor and Research Chair in the Werklund School of Education at the University of Calgary, Canada. Opinions are my own and do not represent those of my employer.