Grantchester popped up recently stating that they have a relationship with FCE. Despite the initial impression given it turns out that the university (see University of Grantchester ) is actually based in Panama, not London UK. Is anyone aware of Grantchester?
CUFCE, registered in Panama, the .ac Internet top-level domain (Ascencion Island) and the same chat pop-up window as Rochville University clones. Plus incorrect statements about organizational membership.
The only Grantchester University in the UK is/was a fictious one. This Grantchester has "borrowed" passages of text from Bristol University.
I'm obviously not defending this particular institution, but it's worth noting that while the .ac top level domain is sometimes misused, it is also used by legitimate institutions. Many UK institutions use it as a shortener, like the University of Manchester and many others, others institutions around the world use it as one of their authoritative domain names, like Dhaka International University.
@SteveFoerster You're right, thank you. I think Stamford University, also in Bangladesh (and chartered) is/was on the .ac domain too.
The controlled domain for education bodies in the UK is .ac.uk .ac has been widely used by bogus bodies claiming to be in the UK - this has led to a number of genuine universities registering the .ac version to prevent misuse of their names, especially as there are fake reports online claiming .ac is the offical version - e.g. http://www.academia.edu/8493860/10_Things_to_look_for_in_a_UK_Based_Distance_Learning_University Outside the UK the problem is slightly different. .ac is sold as 'academia' as well as ascension isles, however, given the level of misuse (e.g. by the University Degree Program mills) , any body using this will have to expect to be closely scrutinised.
That document is a very fake plant meant to boost Grantchester, yes. Interestingly, though, if UK universities originally registered their corresponding .ac domains as a defensive measure, they seem to be getting good use out of them, to the point where they've normalized .ac for this purpose, since if you search for the word university within .ac domains, you get an awful lot of links to real UK universities. Sure, that's fair.