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Job Search Spider -
Beware of Job Scams
Employment scams, also
known as job scams, are a form of advance fee fraud scamming where
certain unscrupulous persons
posing as recruiters or
employers offer attractive employment opportunities which require
the job seeker to pay them money in
advance, usually under
the guise of work visas, travel expenses, and out-of-pocket
expenses.
The scams typically
involve lucrative offers of employment in Europe, the Middle East,
West Africa, or South Africa with money
demanded to be paid to an
agency or travel agent for visas or travel costs. These companies
often present themselves with
official-looking websites
and documentation. Once the victim has paid the advanced fees for
employment, the 'business' either
'declines employment' or
'ceases operating' as soon as the transfer is finalized.
This type of scam has
become more and more frequent recently due to the popularity of
Nigerian 419 scams, and growing
suspicion towards e-mails
offering to transfer money from bank accounts, especially those
originating in Africa. Unlike 419 scams,
job scams tend to mostly
target persons looking for employment in other nations such as
hopeful immigrants or contractors and
operate out of nations
with high immigrant and foreign employment rates.
It is advisable to be
wary of any job offerings which arrive in e-mail unsolicited and
eventually require anyone to pay a fee in
advance, particularly if
the fee is asked to be paid through a financial services company
such as Western Union, or if one must pay
the amount to a bank or
person in a third country (especially a West African nation) that is
suspiciously unrelated to either party.
Most reputable companies
and/or agencies will absorb these costs themselves if they are the
ones seeking the employee.
Types
of job scams
Resume blasting
The simplest form of employment scamming offers guarantees of
employment within a fixed time period, such as 30 days, for a fee.
These "seeker companies" then distribute the victim's
resume to prospective employers (in a process known as "resume
blasting") in hopes of tricking the victim into believing the
authenticity of their business. The victim then pays money to have
his or her details sent to employers who are hiring, but what the
fraudsters do instead is spam hundreds or thousands of employers,
industry websites, and online magazines with a victim's details in
hopes of having the companies send them correspondence they can use
to scam new victims.[clarification needed] Occasionally, they will
also have the company pay for travel and other work related expenses
by passing themselves off as the victim, thus scamming both the
employers and job seekers.
Some of these "employment agencies" offer a money back
guarantee as an incentive so as to bait victims who do not wish to
pay money for a failed employment search. Very few job seekers ever
receive a refund, though it has been known to occur. Recently, a
Canadian company was being investigated by authorities for carrying
out and continuing to advertise such a scheme.
Bogus job offers
More sophisticated scams advertise jobs with real companies and
offer lucrative salaries and conditions with the fraudsters
pretending to be recruitment agents. A bogus telephone interview may
take place and after some time the applicant is informed that the
job is theirs. To secure the job they are instructed to send money
for their work visa or travel costs to the agent, or to a bogus
travel agent who works on the scammer's behalf. No matter what the
variation, they always involve the job seeker sending them or their
agent money, credit card or bank account details.
Another form involves bogus jobs being placed on legitimate
Internet job boards. For example, a fraudster places a bogus job
listing on a legitimate employment site, which is then e-mailed to
thousands of job seekers wishing to find a job meeting that
criteria. The fraudsters then take advantage of those who contact
them, by asking for employment, visa, or travel fees in advance
before they can consider the person for employment. Often, they
create fabricated websites mirroring the real company sites, or
create fake websites parodying a non-existent company which is
legitimately registered in their origin country for the sole purpose
of scamming victims.
Most often, fraudsters will use stolen credit card information to
pay for posting their job opportunities on legitimate sites, as well
as paying for the hosting of a bogus company's site.
A newer form of employment scam has arisen in which users are
sent a bogus job offer, but are not asked to give over financial
information. Instead, their personal information is harvested during
the application process and then sold to third parties for a profit,
or used for identity theft
Cash-handling scam
These scammers do internet searches on various companies to
obtain hiring managers names. They then advertise job offers on Job
Search sites. The job hunter will then apply for the position with a
resume. The person applying for the position will get a message
almost instantly from a common email account such as
"Yahoo", asking for credentials. The scammer will
sometimes request that the victim have an "Instant
Messenger" chat to obtain more information. The scammer
guarantees employment, usually through automated computer programs
that have a certain algorithm, with "canned responses" in
broken English.
At the "Instant Messenger" stage it is usually too late
and the process has already begun. If the victim questions the
integrity of the process, the computer program may call them a
"scammer" and can be quite vulgar. Quite often the
fraudulent negotiables are still sent to the address on the victim's
resume, even after the fake online rant.
The scammer sends the victim fraudulent negotiables, assuring
them that they get to keep part of the funds. They will expect the
victim to send the remainder to various parties that they specify,
under the guise that they are legitimate business contacts. This is
a money laundering scheme, as the victim becomes a pawn in the
filtering process. The process continues until the victim catches
on, or even gets caught, since they would technically be an
accomplice in the eyes of the law.
Another form of the scam is the "Representative/Collection
Agent" variation wherein the scammer advertises, usually on
legitimate online job sites, available positions for
"Representative or Collection Agent" for a company abroad.
As the representative, the job involves receiving cash payments and
depositing payments received from "customers" into one's
account and remitting the rest to the overseas business bank
account. This is essentially money laundering.
All text in this article is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
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