Sujet : Re: Fake Job Offers
De : Soloman (at) *nospam* old.bikers.org (Catrike Ryder)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 17. Mar 2025, 17:14:07
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <iaigtj1c9lvumm9l62hf3celo4hsfelh4u@4ax.com>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
On Mon, 17 Mar 2025 11:06:44 -0500, AMuzi <
am@yellowjersey.org> wrote:
On 3/17/2025 7:36 AM, zen cycle wrote:
On 3/16/2025 12:24 PM, cyclintom wrote:
What appeared to be a job offer from a CEO was really a
phony counterfeit in which a company was claiming that if
you invested $500 into an AI company they could return you
$5,000 in one month.
Gee, ya don't say!
<snipped self-aggrandizing bullshit>
Let's remember that Flunky told us that he has an EE but
he couldn't understand a simple C program that did nothing
but flash lights.
Let's remember that no matter how many times you tell that
lie, it will never become true.
And it was explained in the comments!
The same comments which listed the microcontroller and
peripheral A/D part numbers, which you were completely
unaware was contained in the comments, and couldn't explain
why an external 24-bit A/D was used when the 10-bit A/D
integral to the microcontroller would have been more than
accurate enough for the application.
Even a technician worth half a shit would have seen that,
but it was news to tommy, who allegedly wrote the code.
While Frank did hold a useful and necessary position, he
too had problems working a real job.
no, he didn't. That's another kunich lie. The person who had
problems working real jobs is the guy that has 20 jobs
listed over 20 years on his resume.
Should we say that these people were better educated than
someone who became wealthy being asigned jobs by PhD's who
managed them?
And who would that be? The same guy whose been claiming make
over $10K a month on a million dollar investment for the
past 5 years that's still only worth a million?
>
We cannot deny that education is the key to success but
education actually worked for is a lot better than
education supposedly received when actually avoiding the
draft and paying not the slightest attention to anything
that he hadn't already taught himself as a high school
student.
And who would that be? The same guy that joined the airforce
to avoid the draft, didn't "realize" he had enough credits
to graduate high school so he took the military GED, then
claims to have "read out" three libraries?
>
So I almost fell for a scam but could tell a scam from the
real thing as soon as it was p-laced. Don't let yourself
be conned in the same manner.
I'm gonna make a general statement and suggest no one in
this forum besides you would have even gotten past the point
where someone claiming to be a CEO called them with a job
offer.
>
>
Not only. Here's the latest scumbag technique:
>
https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2025/03/fake-captcha-websites-hijack-your-clipboard-to-install-information-stealers
I've been getting a scam involving tool road fees almost daily for a
week. They come in texts so they make it on my phone where I delete
and report them.
-- C'est bonSoloman