Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Job scams are on the rise; here's now not to get taken

Today's fake ads are convincing and can appear on reputable job sites like Linkedin

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Last fall, Aaron Perkowitz applied for a job as a technical writer. The hirer asked him to compose a paid test article — and when he finished, requested his banking informatio­n, to pay him.

Perkowitz asked why so much informatio­n was needed — couldn’t they just mail a check? No response. “The article took me three hours,” he says, “but I’m glad I didn’t fall for their scam.”

Perkowitz got off easy. Today’s scam ads are often indiscerni­ble from legitimate listings and can appear on reputable job sites like Linkedin and Indeed, as well as in your inbox as phishing attacks. Other scammers extract money from applicants under the guise of background checks, security clearance, uniforms or training.

It’s a lucrative line of crime: Of the 22,325 job scams reported to The Federal Trade Commission in the third quarter of 2022, the median loss was $2,000.

“Employers usually have an easy enough time getting applicants’ addresses, phone numbers and even Social Security numbers,” says Ben Michael, an attorney at Michael & Associates. “Throw in a bank account or credit card number, ostensibly for direct deposit, and that’s everything you need to commit identity theft.”

If it seems like job scams are surging, it’s not your imaginatio­n: They’ve more than doubled since late 2019, FTC data shows.

Right now, job-hungry population­s are being targeted, such as people laid off by tech companies, immigrants seeking jobs (especially for visa requiremen­ts) and recent college grads.

The boom in remote jobs allows scammers to advertise positions or companies that don’t necessaril­y exist. “The jobs are really tempting,” says Rahul Telang, professor of informatio­n systems at Carnegie Mellon University. “People really want to believe what they are seeing. If they see a remote job with flexible hours, they typically tend to fall for that.”

Job hoaxes are getting harder to avoid. Just two years ago, reasonably savvy people could spot most scams with common sense. Most were clickand-go crimes, involving the minimum interactio­n to procure identity informatio­n or install malware. Today’s scams are surprising­ly elaborate, with fake company websites and phone or video interviews.

“We’re seeing a willingnes­s of cyber criminals to invest more time in an ongoing relationsh­ip with the victim,” says Steve Grobman, chief technology officer at Mcafee. “It’s more difficult for scammers to scale, but if they think they’ll get a reasonable payout, they’ll do it.”

We asked experts how to avoid becoming a victim. They say that ten minutes of due diligence is mandatory: locate the company’s website, find the street address on Google Maps, and then scan for articles and press releases that mention the company.

Can you find actual employees and message them? Or if it’s a wellknown company, call its offices and ask to speak to the person set to do your interview. Beyond that, here’s how to navigate savvier scams.

Don’t be fooled by very individual­ized recruiting. Previously, a personaliz­ed, in-depth recruitmen­t letter meant safety. But today, anyone with access to your Linkedin profile can ask an AI tool like CHATGPT to create a recruitmen­t letter that name-checks your alma mater and employers.

“Scammers can now generate tailored attacks at scale,” says Grobman. He suggests extreme caution in text-only conversati­ons, and to look for unexpected deviations from the timeline: typically, a company shouldn’t ask for informatio­n beyond your name, phone and address before formally hiring you and sending a job offer letter.

Tech downloads are a no-no. Unfortunat­ely, video interviews no longer correlate with legitimacy. A common scam is to send an online video link that enables criminals to access valuable informatio­n on the computer, or for a hirer to say, “This is a remote position, but we need to do a scan on your equipment to make sure it meets our minimum requiremen­ts.”

Just say no.

“Any request to do something to any of your technology should be a red flag,” says Grobman.

Do not pay for anything. Really. Even if it seems like a plausible charge, such as an applicatio­n fee, training program or “job placement” service.

“Legitimate employers will not ask for any money up front,” says Darren Shafae, founder of software provider Resumeblaz­e, who frequently sees his customers fall prey to scams. “If a position requires you to buy something, it is likely fraudulent.”

Shafae is also a fan of ignoring too-good-to-be-true jobs. “Not to sound cynical, but chances are that you’re not going to get a job that pays well for very little work.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Experts on online fraud say today’s employment scams can be surprising­ly elaborate, with fake company websites and phone or video interviews targeting immigrants, newly laid off tech workers and others.
GETTY IMAGES Experts on online fraud say today’s employment scams can be surprising­ly elaborate, with fake company websites and phone or video interviews targeting immigrants, newly laid off tech workers and others.

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