Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses

Laid-Off Workers Are Flooded With Fake Job Offers (wsj.com) 25

Employment scams using fake job opportunities to swindle applicants are on the rise and have found a new, prime target in laid-off tech workers. From a report: These schemes -- which often involve fictitious job listings, interviews with fake recruiters and sham onboarding processes to steal job seekers' money or identities -- proliferated during the pandemic alongside virtual hiring and remote work, according to Federal Trade Commission data. Scammers now appear to be zeroing in on workers who have recently lost jobs, particularly in the tech industry, workforce experts and recent job-scam victims say. The number of reported job scams nearly tripled to 104,000 between 2019 and 2021 and remained elevated in 2022, according to the FTC. U.S. workers lost more than $200 million from employment-related scams in 2021, up from $133 million in 2019, agency data show.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Laid-Off Workers Are Flooded With Fake Job Offers

Comments Filter:
  • Meet the recruiter in person at their office before filling out any paperwork.

    • Most companies don't even want more than your C.V. until you get on-site to pick up your badge, corporate laptop / phone, and so on.

      Anything else is likely to be similar to my employment offers. I get a Statement of Work. We both sign it. They pay my company by check, net 10. For most companies I still have to go on-site to pick up a badge, laptop, and phone.
    • and the remote / 3rd party recruiter that is not local?
      Or cases like the JOB is at X site but the firm doing the hiring is out of state.

    • Most people don't have access to a time machine to travel back to 2019.

    • I've never interviewed for a job where I had the opportunity to physically interact with the recruiter before submitting an application, or at least my resume. Many times the recruiter is located somewhere very far away from where I live and where the job is. Not realistic for the vast majority of job seekers.

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      So for my last job I did not meet with any physical person. The information I gave was minimal. The account I used for paychecks was one of my low balance online only accounts.

      Many job offers are fake only to satisfy legal requirements to offer jobs to external candidates. The question is how much will these fake jobs cost the job seeker and if there is a significant scam element. Any cash up front, such as a Amway, has always indicated a scam. Piece wise or commission only jobs, such as those that sprung

    • by thomn8r ( 635504 )

      Meet the recruiter in person at their office before filling out any paperwork.

      The body shops (eg Robert Half and their ilk) want you to fill out all of the paperwork before they even consider you for a job. I fell for that exactly once - they told me there was a position and I had to "hurry up and get submitted by EOB that day." It was all bullshit.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      What if their offices and recruiters are fake too? :P

  • You will need to download Telegram to conduct the interview with our supervisor. Please download Telegram so we can communicate easier.
  • received an invoice just don't pay it!

  • Twenty years ago this was happening...even covered it here on /.

    https://yro.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]

    citking writes
    "News.com.com reports that, in an attempt to curb identity theft on its service, online career listing site Monster.com has begun warning its users of fake job postings bent on stealing personal information. 'Regrettably, from time to time, false job postings are listed online and used to illegally collect personal information from unsuspecting job seekers', according to an e-mail sent by the compa

    • by kackle ( 910159 )
      Ha; I used a small mom-and-pop dial-up ISP in the 1990s. Because of that I think, I rarely got any spam. Naive me put my resume up on "Monster Board" with my email address on it. Within 24 hours, I was getting 30 pieces of spam per day. Somewhat trivial, but no longer near zero. Decades later, I still am getting much spam on that account.
  • by TheNameOfNick ( 7286618 ) on Monday January 16, 2023 @11:44AM (#63212826)

    Laws without enforcement only constrain honest people.

  • There was a scammer(s?) that loved to post fake job offers on our FB neighborhood pages claiming to have 3rd shift jobs nearby for Amazon (including transport to/from the job), or even better; work at home for Netflix. Both were 3rd shift positions, claiming up to $85/hr. They'd post hiring events to lure victims in.

    And looking at their website, it was obvious they were not legit, (generic with unfinished pages in the wordpress template) but I'm sure lots of out of work folks fell for it, desperate for an

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If Bubba Wallace sees a garage pull string that scares him there's 15 FBI agents at the ready.
    For this.... ?

It is clear that the individual who persecutes a man, his brother, because he is not of the same opinion, is a monster. - Voltaire

Working...