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My significant other recently got a job interview and we've gotten some very weird vibes from it. To start, we're obviously not going to share financial details, put any kind of down payment, or similar on a job, and we haven't seen that type of red flag pop up yet. This is what has us baffled.

That said, here's what's happened so far:

  • It's a text interview. I've never heard of that, nor have some of my coworkers.
  • They utilize Zip Recruiter
  • There is a real position for that job. Quite detailed. The real company has been around for over a decade.
  • They have the name of a real employee at that job. He's been there for 6 months
  • The site's contact info is support@[company-name].com
  • The interviewer's info is [his-name].[company-name]@gmail.com
  • Their name is very American, their picture looks white or hispanic, but the interviewer types pretty broken english. E.G. An interview question was 'Do you understand the word"Privacy and Code of Conduct' (I've attempted to replicate the lacking spaces and end quote on purpose.)

I've been encouraging her to flip questions, such as (after answering) asking "Can you point me to your specific Code of Conduct" and such. The position is for graphic design work, so the various kinds of scams I've looked up for remote positions don't seem to apply.

She says that the questions, as it continued, started sounding more like a real interview.

They did say something about "We'll have to set up a mini-office in your home"; which sounds like the hook, though we don't have evidence yet of that. I'm suspecting that they'll have no hook this interview and instead they'll contact again, require some kind of payment for the "mini-office" now that you think you got the job. It could, instead, be some kind of phishing scam that is just overly involved, but the info they'd have right now is essentially publicly available so..

I believe if it's a scam that is based around this mini-office thing. Anyone ever hear of something like this?

EDIT: We've confirmed it was a scam via chatting with the real person on LinkedIn.

Note: I'm currently a remote employee myself and I've only ever dealt with myriad VPNs, bio-verification in the office, or 2-factor via the phone.

Kat
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user1765812
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    It's also possible that they will send you a large check to cover the "mini-office" and ask you to forward some or all of it (e.g. "Here is a check to cover construction of your mini-office, please deposit it and wire the funds to our recommended mini-office setup company as follows..."). – Robert Columbia Apr 20 '20 at 16:17
  • This might be more of a question for https://workplace.stackexchange.com – Philipp Jun 18 '20 at 14:24

2 Answers2

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There are several likely scenarios.

  1. You agree to do the job for them and work for several weeks but never get paid.
  2. You are promised a check to reimburse you for software you have to purchase from their operation. The check will not arrive or will be fraudulent (and you will be on hook for the funds).
  3. You provide personal details like your Social Security Number and birth date in the USA ("for an employability check") and it is used even years later to file for unemployment or open a credit account in your name.
Matthew K
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  • They ask you to do shady things for them without ever providing you with enough contact information to find out who you are really working for.
  • – Philipp Jun 18 '20 at 14:25