here, some AI-LLM legal musings on the last Perplexity thread that is the context of the last two posts. Of course, I am not a lawyer but I am a citizen with legal interests:
001. the tasking to Perplexity, particularly because I refer to these statutes in the blog subtitle, and I'm curious how they stand now:
"Reflect on this thread’s bleak outlook in terms of justice and HEA section 487(c)(3) 34 CFR Subpart F, 668.71–668.74 AND 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729–3733."
002. the answer [in full]:
"The thread's outlook is bleak precisely because the legal instruments that should provide relief are either structurally limited, chronically underenforced, or dependent on prosecutorial will that has historically not materialized in this sector.
But the instruments named here are among the sharpest available, and the gap between what they authorize and what has been done with them is itself a form of institutional ignorism.
HEA Section 487(c)(3): The Misrepresentation Provision
What It Authorizes
Section 487(c)(3) of the Higher Education Act prohibits Title IV-participating institutions from engaging in "substantial misrepresentation" of the nature of their educational programs, their financial charges, or the employability of their graduates. The Department of Education's implementing regulations at 34 C.F.R. §§ 668.71–668.74 define substantial misrepresentation as any statement that has "the likelihood or tendency to deceive or confuse" a prospective student, and specifically include misrepresentation regarding:
- The nature of the program: its educational objectives, the occupational designation for which it prepares students, and whether it is accredited
- The employability of graduates: job placement rates, types of positions graduates obtain, and starting salaries
- The financial charges: the total cost of attendance, net price, and the relationship between debt and expected income

