This paper introduces the Digital Presence Paradox (DPP) — a formal conceptual framework addressing a structural condition in online higher education in which learners achieve full institutional visibility through logins, submissions, and completions, while remaining entirely absent intellectually. The DPP is produced by three interdependent mechanisms: the Anonymity Shield, the Consumption Architecture, and the Metrics Mismatch. The paper proposes Digital Intellectual Presence (DIP) as a measurable individual-level construct, operationalised through a three-tier developmental model (You Exist / You Engage / You Contribute), and introduces the Intellectual Fingerprint Index (IFI) as the operational measurement instrument. The framework extends the Community of Inquiry (CoI) model (Garrison, Anderson & Archer, 2000) by addressing a confirmed gap: the absence of any individual-level instrument for measuring intellectual contribution in online learning environments. The paper is situated within the context of India's National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020), NAAC and NIRF quality assurance frameworks, global EdTech expansion, and emerging evidence on how Generative AI amplifies intellectual passivity in online learners. A four-intervention solution architecture and a five-study empirical research agenda are proposed. This paper represents the author's original independent scholarly contribution. Affiliation is stated for identification purposes only.
Rahul Sharma (Wed,) studied this question.