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Coursedevil

This is false. Online courses have high upfront production costs—video editing, animations, code testing, and platform fees (30% to Apple/Google). When 10,000 people access a course via , the creator loses roughly $150,000 in potential revenue (assuming a $15 average sale). That loss means the creator cannot afford to update the course for 2025 tech standards, leaving paying customers with obsolete information.

| Feature | CourseDevil (Pirated) | Udemy (Sale) | Coursera (Audit) | YouTube | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | $0 - $20 (one-time) | $10 - $15 per course | Free (no cert) | Free | | Quality | Inconsistent / Malware risk | High | High | Varies | | Certificate | None (Forged ones exist) | Yes (for completion) | Yes (paid only) | No | | Instructor Support | None | Q&A section | Peer grading | Comments | | Legal Risk | High (DMCA notices) | None | None | None | coursedevil

The term "CourseDevil" itself is a portmanteau of "Course" and "Devil," suggesting a rebellious, devil-may-care attitude toward copyright law. The platform claims to "democratize education," arguing that a struggling student in a developing nation shouldn't have to pay a month's salary for a single coding bootcamp. This is false