The Texas State Confessions Page on Facebook created by a 20-year-old economic student of the University of Texas, Austin, has created a huge uproar across the campus and already gathered more than 7,000 'likes' since its launch last month.

This page features students' darkest secrets, fantasies, relationships, addictions, crushes and complaints. Some of these posts are sleazy, funny, romantic, depressing and disturbing.

"The site is mostly humor for me," Ragen Barlow, interior design junior told The University Star. "So many students on there just want to tell their dirty secrets but don't want their friends to know."

Barlow said that it was entertaining to read these interesting confessions about people's mindsets and feelings, which may or may not be true.

For a student to make a confession on this page, they have to first like the page and go to edufess.com in order to make an anonymous submission. And once students post their confessions, moderators decide which ones go online and which don't.

The creator of the page, who wished to be called Zach, told the newspaper that he liked to keep the confessions anonymous to prevent things going wrong.

Zach said that every day he received around 500 confessions.

A student's confession appears on this Facebook page with a number beside it to protect the owners' identity.

"#3629 I can't tell if I miss my ex and want to get back with him, or if I just miss what we had. I still talk to him all the time. Gah I just don't know where that line is."

One look at this page sparks curiosity in one's minds as no one knows who has posted what confession and indirectly forces people to discuss or speculate as to who might have done it.

UTSA President Ricardo Romo, told My Sanantonio that administrators are aware of the page but will not take any action against them as it is not affiliated to the university.

Zach has also developed similar pages for Texas State University-San Marcos, Universities of Florida and Yale. He has one called UT Love, specifically for romantic confessions.

Heather Trepal, a UTSA associate professor of counseling, told the newspaper that these anonymous submissions indirectly help students to blurt out their dirty secrets and lighten their minds, which would have been difficult to do otherwise.

However, Trepal is concerned about cyber bullying among the students.