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AI job scams are booming – and I was fooled by one. Here is how to avoid them


in reply to Powderhorn

Anything that asks me for stuff then they will send more details gets the response. Details now and if I like it I will send you more. Its kinda funny with me as I list the stuff im doing while unemployed. So I will get. We need a guru tech guy with in depth and recent substitute teaching experience. blah blah to get more details. im always like, please pray tell me this postion where this part of my background is so important.
in reply to Megaman_EXE

at best it was a playground for people who are fundamentally fucked in the head, i've never understood how any normal person can tolerate it at all.
in reply to Powderhorn

It was located in the city in which I live


"Hot singles in your area!"

in reply to HarkMahlberg

I get Linked in emails from recruiters constantly offering "Data Technician" (my title) jobs in my city.

Like dude, my city is like, 60k people, 99% work for one of the 3 giant AG companies. Ain't no other data centers here besides mine.

in reply to Powderhorn

When I received the first email from my “headhunter”, I was drawn in by how professional and customised it seemed. The writing was of a good standard and the sender was clearly familiar with my profile. It felt personal. Even five years ago, says Rosser, you could often spot a scam just by looking at the grammar. “But they’re so clever now.”

“The growing accessibility of AI means that criminals have way more leverage than they ever did before,” Webb says. “They can produce these scams much faster. They can make them more relevant, and there’s a much higher level of sophistication.”


This was the most interesting part, to me.

In the past, scammers deliberately made their pitches obvious, so only "suckers" would fall for them. With AI, it's now scalable to make the whole thing targeted enough to be believable.

And that's truly scary.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to definitemaybe

I don't think this is something new, there has always been "spear phishing", i.e. targeted scams. The scattergun approach to spam still exists separately, it's just that the targeted scams are now easier to set up.
in reply to smeg

Fully automated targeted scams are new. That wasn't possible before. The cheap scalability is the scary part.
in reply to Powderhorn

I straight up deleted LinkedIn. It's too much information thats made publically available, it's a constant pipeline to the black market for compromising info (and it's already too late), and it's just literally the most straight up annoying thing I've ever used. The people are fake (I mean they are real but they are straight up annoying), the jobs are mostly fake, and it's a constant stream of scams, recruiters trying to mine your info and mislead you, salespeople peddling their crap constantly.

No thanks. Seriously give it a try, because that shit is toxic