This is getting very frustrating. I work on a virtual machine at work that has an IP address in a time zone 6 hours ahead of my physical location, so when I saw people commenting that changing the time on their machine worked, I just went on my work computer and I could see results on Jan 2. I turned in my work experience around 6PM Eastern US time on Jan 2nd. I bet they just started with "Jan 3" and are carrying on from that date.
It is shocking to me that their IT team chose to look at the timestamp provided by the user instead of that provided by an internet service provider when releasing results. I have a CS background, nothing in web development, but for time sensitive things like this even with no experience in web development I know it is common sense to use a timestamp from a service provider and not one provided by the user's machine.
This is a reputation risk for GARP. They confirmed they only have TWO people working on the work review and are running a website filled with VERY VERY easy to fix bugs that people have been commenting on for years. It makes them look incredibly cheap.
What is worst is that I am worried that people using virtual machines or those who changed the clock on their machine may anger GARP in some way, but frankly if your IT team does not have the common sense to use a service provider timestamp instead of one from the user that is susceptible to a long list of issues, this is on them. Many easy ways to make this process more robust that they are not doing.
It is shocking to me that their IT team chose to look at the timestamp provided by the user instead of that provided by an internet service provider when releasing results. I have a CS background, nothing in web development, but for time sensitive things like this even with no experience in web development I know it is common sense to use a timestamp from a service provider and not one provided by the user's machine.
This is a reputation risk for GARP. They confirmed they only have TWO people working on the work review and are running a website filled with VERY VERY easy to fix bugs that people have been commenting on for years. It makes them look incredibly cheap.
What is worst is that I am worried that people using virtual machines or those who changed the clock on their machine may anger GARP in some way, but frankly if your IT team does not have the common sense to use a service provider timestamp instead of one from the user that is susceptible to a long list of issues, this is on them. Many easy ways to make this process more robust that they are not doing.