Stanford student Theo Baker describes in a guest essay for the New York Times how ChatGPT shaped his entire graduating class. His conclusion: AI turned an already existing culture of dishonesty at the elite university into the default.

Theo Baker, graduating from Stanford University in June 2026, belongs to the first class that spent its entire college career alongside ChatGPT. The chatbot launched roughly two months after he started school in fall 2022. In a guest essay for the New York Times, Baker describes how AI tipped an already fragile culture of academic integrity at the elite university past the point of no return.

"Just a little bit of fraud"

Even before Baker arrived, Stanford's reputation was already bruised—scandals involving Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes, crypto fraudster Do Kwon, and the Juul founders had seen to that. ChatGPT then made cheating easier and more lucrative than ever, Baker writes. A classmate summed up the campus vibe as "just a little bit of fraud" while talking about sponsor hardware her student club never returned. Baker adopts the phrase as a motif for his entire class.

What that looks like in practice, according to Baker: classmates embezzled dorm funds, faked Covid infections to score UberEats credits, and signed honor pledges swearing they hadn't used ChatGPT while the tool was open in the next browser tab. One classmate signed such a pledge at a yacht party funded by venture capitalists. In a campus-wide survey during junior year, 49 percent of 849 computer science majors said they'd rather cheat on an exam than fail.