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Top 4 Online Job Scams to Avoid in 2020

2020 has the United States diving into a recession that is surpassing the Great Depression of the 1930s which can be predominantly attributed to the nationwide effect of the pandemic and its ensuing restrictions. Survivors of the associated lockdowns were able to transition their office jobs from the corporate workspaces to telecommuting work from home adaptations.

Other displaced workers were eligible for special unemployment benefits, while others were not, affecting millions of families across America. When times are rough, it leaves Americans desperate to find ways to take care of their families, and desperate people do desperate things. Sometimes they turn to crime, develop mental health issues, turn to drugs and alcohol which leads to increased domestic violence, and suicidal ideation.

This with the greatest resources, amidst the 2020 pandemic, they turn their attention to online job search. This makes sense based on the fact that the pandemic survivors are finding employment as remote workers working from home.

Then there is that criminal element again, that seeks to exploit Americans in trouble, struggling to find ways to survive in an uncertain world.

1. Secret Shopper

You may receive or respond to an offer to become a secret shopper. Who doesn’t like shopping, and the ability to be paid for doing it? Sounds incredible. As a secret shopper, you are given assignments where you go to a particular store in your area and purchase a specific list of items.

Your job includes forwarding the items to the shopping investigative service that you work for, along with your report on your experience, and an invoice for any expenses incurred for your service. Only you will never be reimbursed or paid for the items you purchased and sent.

2. Remote Payroll Processor

Let’s say you are offered a job to be a virtual payroll processor. The job pays $36,000 a year, and all you need to do is to print payroll checks and send them via UPS or FedEx to employees. You do this for a month, then get your first $3,000 check, generally plus a bonus, which keeps you working diligently until you are notified by your bank that the check did not clear. “No problem,” says your new boss, they are sending a replacement-check plus an additional bonus for your trouble. They trust you will keep up the good work until that one does not clear.

3. Crowd Shipping

Or you land an online job as a crowd-shipping processor for a recognizable online retailer, where you earn $1,500 a month for receiving packages from various warehouse providers, combine the packages and send them to the customer on the behalf of the retailer. You agree to process 20 to 40 packages per month. Not a bad arrangement, as you are earning nearly $40 per package. Almost sounds too good to be true.

Just because you are being contacted by an employer you recognize is no reason to let down your guard because cybercriminals have no problem posing as Fortune 500 companies who exploit and rip-off new remote worker hires. Do not be one of the victims of such a nefarious con, and by all means, do not become an accessory to the criminal activity.

“Sounds too good to be true,” is a common element in these online job scams. Reshipping cons come in many different shapes and sizes. You already know that if it sounds too good to be true, your paycheck is likely to bounce, and you may have played a part in an organized crime syndicate’s reshipping scam and may suffer criminal charges yourself. It is on you to exercise due diligence and check out these offers that sound like they may not be for real.

And you? You will have to try to explain to the authorities why you are not guilty of fraud and counterfeiting and may be subject to prosecution regardless.

The online job con basically looks like you are being offered a legitimate work from home opportunity from a legitimate company. You will be made a generous off. In most cases, you will be offered remuneration that feels like its higher than you might expect.

Generally, in retrospect, most victims of an online job con remember receiving an internal intuitive hit accompanied by the thought that “something doesn’t feel quite right,” about this.

4. Check Fraud

Check fraud is a common element of these felonious fake job scams. It is reported that authentic company checks can be obtained through criminal sources, or cashier’s checks of real banks via the dark web, which clears all initial security clearances by your bank at the time of deposit.

Only later, when your bank is notified by the initiating bank of the fraudulent item are you notified, and by that time, it is too late. You have already been ripped off, and your fake employer is long gone.

Some of these offers will require an upfront fee to qualify for the job being offered, others will prepay you with a phony cashier’s check, which you can use to in a sense pre-pay your expenses to participate or set up your home office. This prepayment can include a sign-on bonus for you to keep above and beyond your startup costs.

Nonetheless, all the while, there is no job, and any check, even if drawn on an authentic business’ account, cashier’s check, or otherwise, will not clear, leaving you holding the money bag.

And if you have performed any “work duties” on the behalf of your masquerading employer, you are out that as well.

Your identity may have been compromised, as you may have given the cybercriminals your sensitive personal and banking data in the application or “employment” process, which they may use elsewhere within the cybercrime syndicate.

 

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Fortune 500 Companies Exploit and Rip-off New Remote Worker Hires

Since the coronavirus pandemic lockdown, more jobs are moving online and more telecommuters are working from home than ever before, and the evil underground and crime syndicates are seeking whom they may devour in this mad dash to move from industrialized work environments to remote workers working from home.

Fortune 500 Company Job Scams

You might be surprised to discover that even the biggest and best Fortune 500 companies appear to be exploiting and ripping-off new remote worker hires. That’s what you might think if you didn’t know any better.

This means you must be cautious and exert your due diligence when you are being courted by a potential telework employer because there are wolves in sheep’s clothing looking to exploit you if given half the chance.

We’ve heard the stories, and as more come, we will let you know how you can avoid the pitfall and protect yourself by being swindled by some unscrupulous villain posing as an authentic employer.

Paid in Advance

Case in point: Julian had posted his resume online to widen his range of opportunities in the telecommuting marketplace. Not long after, he received an email from the HR department of a top-rated Fortune 500 company.

Julian is resourceful, so he looked up the HR representative, and was able to verify that he did indeed work for the company in the HR department, just as he had presented himself.

Time was ticking and the window on this $35-an-hour work from home job opening, which was a perfect fit for Julian, was closing soon. Full benefits and 45 days of advanced-expense-paid training were included in the offer.

Julian accepted the offer and received an $8,124.16 check in the mail drawn on the Fortune 500 company’s account and he was instructed to use some of the advances to buy equipment online that would be necessary for him to connect remotely to the company.

He promptly deposited the check and used his debit card to purchase the equipment which was purchased through an employee-encoded link from the company (a long-tailed URL that included the name of the company). The one-time cost of the equipment: $2,700.00 including a code (provided by the HR representative) for free three-day delivery to Julian’s address.

Three days later no package arrived. Two more days passed, and Julian was contacted by his bank reporting the check (though it for all intents and purposes was a real check from the company) had bounced and reportedly was obtained via the dark web.

Because Julian had used his debit card (which does not offer the higher degree of protection to the user as a credit card) to make the $2,700.00 purchase, he was out that money for certain, and he was also on the hook for what he had already spent of the original $8,124.16.

Google Hangouts Interview

In another case, Andrew received an opportunity to interview for a high-ranking employer via Google Hangouts (which is currently in the process of being phased out by Google) which is also a common component of these felonious fake online job scams offers.

Andrew was awarded the job and was sent two consecutively numbered checks from the company, one for the wages, and one for the equipment cost. Like Julian, Andrew had to purchase the telecommute gear through their coded link.

You or I Could be Victimized

Julian and Andrew are not incompetent. They are smart, well-educated, and honest people, just like you and me. Even the brightest individuals can be conned by a psychopathic con artist who will do anything to fleece you of your last remaining resources without blinking an eye.

You can (and should) report to your local police if you are ever the victim of an online job scam.

Note that if you do report the scam to the authorities, they will be hard-pressed to actually catch these crooks to prosecute or return your losses to you. These criminals are highly adept at covering their tracks and are potentially subdivisions of highly sophisticated crime syndicates.

With the COVID-19 lockdown in progress and many job seekers taking their job searches to the Internet, be aware that these scoundrels are out there.

Hot Tip

In both cases, Julian’s and Andrews, a simple phone call to the HR department of the company would have avoided any financial exposure, giving them the heads up to contact the authorities to report the job scam.