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Job Scams

Job Scams

Byte-Sized Summary:

  • If it sounds too good to be true, it is.

  • Never respond to unsolicited emails or open attachments that come with themespecially if the message is blank!

  • Forward all suspicious messages to spam[at]eku.edu; if it is real, we will let you know!

 

Increasingly, we are seeing phishing emails targeting students in an attempt to steal their money through a fake job scam.  Historically, phishing attacks were generally trying to steal students’ accounts and personal information in order to send out other scam emails to individuals outside the university.  This year, however, we have seen a shift in attackers directly targeting our students with scams.  Sadly, we have also seen several students fall victim to these scams after retrieving the emails from the quarantine.  Remember to be VERY cautious with any email sent to the quarantine.

Examples:

Sometimes, scams are just an email with all the information in the body:
 

Often, the body is empty, but the information is an attachment (please note that you should never open attachments from unknown senders):


 

 

Example of an attachment:
 

What to watch out for:

The attacks follow a common theme:  They all offer a job that pays extremely well for the very small amount of work required.  The work is often very general, and anyone would be qualified for it.  Often, the advertised pay exceeds $100/hour which is far above the actual level of pay for these kinds of jobs.
 

The leading indicators are often:

  • The email is coming from a Gmail or other public email address.
  • The job offers pay that is too high for the number of hours.
  • The purported work can be completed easily from home and would not interfere with your studies.
  • The email instructs you to follow up using your personal email because attackers know that we will block these addresses from the school email.
  • The email asks you follow up to an email address different from the original sender's address.
  • The email requests that you communicate via text or another chat service (usually WhatsApp).
  • The email body is blank but has an attachment with the information as an attempt to bypass spam filters.
  • The email may be signed as a faculty member at EKU, but the sender's address is not an EKU address and might not match the faculty member’s name.

How they will steal your money:

The scam will generally work as follows:  The attacker sends thousands of emails to EKU students promising a too-good-to-be-true job.  Scammers only need to fool a couple of students for the scam to be successful.  Once you reply, they conduct a fake and usually very simple online job interview, usually via text or chat.  You will then be offered the job!  Then, they will send you a check to cash, which you are to use to purchase a computer and other equipment needed for the job.  They will direct you to a “vendor” where you should purchase that equipment.  Often, the check will be for more than the cost of the equipment, and they will tell you to keep the extra money as a “bonus.”  You will buy the equipment from the vendor, which is not a real storefront and is just the attackers taking your money.  The check will then bounce from your bank as it will turn out that it was a fake check, and the bank will remove that money from your account.  
 

As a result, you are out hundredsmaybe even thousandsof dollars by purchasing equipment that you will never receive for a job that is not real.  You can contact the police, but there will be little they can do to help.  The attackers are almost always located in countries where US law enforcement has no ability to track them down or arrest them.