Getting the job of your dreams is what many of us wish for. However, knowing the difference between a real opportunity and a scam offer can keep job seekers safe from the clutches of cyber-crooks looking to reel them in. After days and weeks of online job searches, that perfect job may now be just a click away. Thatâs when itâs time to pause, take a deep breath, and step away from your device.
In a PSA, the FBI referred to fake employment scams as an old trick with big improvements. The agency says, âWhile hiring scams have been around for many years, cyber criminalsâ emerging use of spoofed websites to harvest PII and steal money shows an increased level of complexity.â They add âCriminals often lend credibility to their scheme by advertising alongside legitimate employers and job placement firms, enabling them to target victims of all skill and income levels.â
What Job Scammers Want
Thereâs no doubt these swindlers are after your PII, and theyâll say anything to get their hands on it. They can demand their fake employment contract needs your signature (so they have a copy of it). Still, Social Security numbers, credit card info, direct deposit bank account data (for your paychecks, of course), a copy of your passport, and driverâs license may all be required for the job. If you question the need for all this PII, the likely answer youâll get is some version of âtrust me.â
What happens after a job seeker dutifully provides everything theyâre asked? The scammer disappears and your PII vanishes with them.
Learn the Red Flags
- Theyâre asking you to shop for them.
- You have to send them money.
- The job sounds too good to be true.
- The job they offer isnât the one you applied for.
- They wonât meet you in person.
- You canât verify their information.
- Theyâre asking for personal information.
- Youâll be working from home.
Keep Online Job Hunting Safe
The road to happy job hunting is littered with scam job offers. But remember, the real jobs are out there too. Always use common sense as your guide to begin ferreting-out the fake from the real.
- Researching the company before applying can expose things you should know about before you leap, including finding out if itâs a scam scenario.
- If an email from the ârecruiterâ includes links and attachments, donât follow or open them before verifying.
- Use verification measures like checking the address of the email sender, and never act on contact information in the text â it could be a hacker setup. Instead, type in the real URL yourself, find the real phone number and start calling.
- Never send PII to someone youâve never met and question why any job would need so much of it. Ask your common sense: does the job description require it?
- Job searching is the perfect time to remember the adage âIf it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.â