Security That Supports Assessment Integrity and Platform Trust
Multi-layer security across digital assessments and higher-education ERP, covering exam integrity, AES-256 encryption, role-based access, audit workflows, and AI-powered cheat detection.
Assessment Security
What the exam platform can enforce
SentinelExamOS carries a much deeper anti-cheat and delivery-control story than a normal browser-based testing tool.
FAQ
Questions buyers commonly ask
SentinelExamOS goes beyond basic browser lockdown. It includes AI/LLM tool detection, Chrome extension auditing, VM and Intel AMT checks, KVM-over-IP detection, USB/Bluetooth/VPN monitoring, multi-monitor detection, and continuous 30-second biometric re-scans. These layered controls work together rather than relying on a single mechanism.
Yes. Tutelage supports multiple proctoring tiers from no-proctoring mode for practice tests to full-lockdown mode for high-stakes exams. Security features can be selectively enabled based on the assessment type, allowing coaching mock tests and certification exams to run with appropriate controls on the same platform.
UIMS ERP security focuses on role-based access control (RBAC), data encryption at rest and in transit, audit trail logging for all transactions, and workflow-based approvals for sensitive operations like fee changes, result modifications, and HR actions. Exam proctoring security is about test-taker integrity; ERP security is about institutional data governance.
Every significant action in both SentinelExamOS and UIMS generates an immutable audit record. Question authoring follows a draft-to-review-to-approved workflow. Exam delivery logs every session event. Result modifications require approval chains. This audit trail supports compliance requirements and builds institutional trust in the platform.
Yes. Tutelage supports per-exam security configuration. An institution can run a chapter test with minimal controls and a scholarship exam with full lockdown, AI detection, and biometric verification on the same platform. White-label tenants can also define their own default security policies.
