Got an odd email from a 'recruitment' agent today...
-
I've been an MVP since 2011 ((Status page)[^] - but the sheild indicates Protector, it's a diamond for MVP. If you hover the mouse over the symbol it labels it. (And I've been a Protector for ... oooo ... couple of years, I think?) :laugh:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
OriginalGriff wrote:
I've been a Protector for ... oooo ... couple of years
Griff, you're my hero. :-O
-
Perhaps something like a privateer :-)
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a fucking golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?" "You mean like from space?" "No, from Canada." If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.We be pirates!
veni bibi saltavi
-
Hi All, I was interested to know if anyone else has had a slightly strange Email from Total Jobs. It read like a recruiter was just trying to finish my details I have pasted it below.
Quote:
Dear Mr Glenn Patton, You have received this letter because you posted your CV on TotalJobs.com. Our company is searching and attracting the best employees for the most interesting positions in most popular industries. We've found a new job opportunity you may be interested in. After reviewing your resume, we can offer you a job corresponding to your qualification. The Employeer interested in your resume and would like to ask you a few questions. 1. Would you like to work at home through the Internet? 2. Do have free time now from 9 AM to 3 PM to work? 3. Your daily routine plan, for example: "7 AM I wake up, 9 AM I eat breakfast, 12 PM - I go to sleep" 4. Do you prefer to work part-time or full-time? Before you can change your life, you must first change your thinking. If you are interested in working at home and you answer these questions, the company will e-mail you detailed job offer description and you can get the job. King regards, Roger Damon Recruitment Coordinator VMC Recruitment via Totaljobs.com Job Request ID: 96751467
also there was 'something' attached that my email client blocked. Odd right I tried to send it to Total Jobs and have heard nothing. I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
glennPattonBackInThePUB wrote:
I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
Well, the recruiter obviously needs help, and can't find their brain! :-D
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined." - Homer
-
Hi All, I was interested to know if anyone else has had a slightly strange Email from Total Jobs. It read like a recruiter was just trying to finish my details I have pasted it below.
Quote:
Dear Mr Glenn Patton, You have received this letter because you posted your CV on TotalJobs.com. Our company is searching and attracting the best employees for the most interesting positions in most popular industries. We've found a new job opportunity you may be interested in. After reviewing your resume, we can offer you a job corresponding to your qualification. The Employeer interested in your resume and would like to ask you a few questions. 1. Would you like to work at home through the Internet? 2. Do have free time now from 9 AM to 3 PM to work? 3. Your daily routine plan, for example: "7 AM I wake up, 9 AM I eat breakfast, 12 PM - I go to sleep" 4. Do you prefer to work part-time or full-time? Before you can change your life, you must first change your thinking. If you are interested in working at home and you answer these questions, the company will e-mail you detailed job offer description and you can get the job. King regards, Roger Damon Recruitment Coordinator VMC Recruitment via Totaljobs.com Job Request ID: 96751467
also there was 'something' attached that my email client blocked. Odd right I tried to send it to Total Jobs and have heard nothing. I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
glennPattonBackInThePUB wrote:
King regards,
Well, I didn't know I was dealing with royalty
-
glennPattonBackInThePUB wrote:
King regards,
Well, I didn't know I was dealing with royalty
-
We be pirates!
veni bibi saltavi
Speak for yersel, matey! Oi be a Corsair!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
-
Speak for yersel, matey! Oi be a Corsair!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
OriginalGriff wrote:
Corsair
Not too good when it's :baaaa!:
veni bibi saltavi
-
OriginalGriff wrote:
I've been a Protector for ... oooo ... couple of years
Griff, you're my hero. :-O
That's not a good sign - you're a bad guy, remember? :laugh:
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
-
King Roger, obviously.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
-
King Roger, obviously.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
King Roger, so many obscene jokes :wtf:
-
Clearly spam. Dodgy attachment, crap English, odd questions, stupid empowering tagline. Delete it, then delete it again.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
-
Hi All, I was interested to know if anyone else has had a slightly strange Email from Total Jobs. It read like a recruiter was just trying to finish my details I have pasted it below.
Quote:
Dear Mr Glenn Patton, You have received this letter because you posted your CV on TotalJobs.com. Our company is searching and attracting the best employees for the most interesting positions in most popular industries. We've found a new job opportunity you may be interested in. After reviewing your resume, we can offer you a job corresponding to your qualification. The Employeer interested in your resume and would like to ask you a few questions. 1. Would you like to work at home through the Internet? 2. Do have free time now from 9 AM to 3 PM to work? 3. Your daily routine plan, for example: "7 AM I wake up, 9 AM I eat breakfast, 12 PM - I go to sleep" 4. Do you prefer to work part-time or full-time? Before you can change your life, you must first change your thinking. If you are interested in working at home and you answer these questions, the company will e-mail you detailed job offer description and you can get the job. King regards, Roger Damon Recruitment Coordinator VMC Recruitment via Totaljobs.com Job Request ID: 96751467
also there was 'something' attached that my email client blocked. Odd right I tried to send it to Total Jobs and have heard nothing. I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
-
Hi All, I was interested to know if anyone else has had a slightly strange Email from Total Jobs. It read like a recruiter was just trying to finish my details I have pasted it below.
Quote:
Dear Mr Glenn Patton, You have received this letter because you posted your CV on TotalJobs.com. Our company is searching and attracting the best employees for the most interesting positions in most popular industries. We've found a new job opportunity you may be interested in. After reviewing your resume, we can offer you a job corresponding to your qualification. The Employeer interested in your resume and would like to ask you a few questions. 1. Would you like to work at home through the Internet? 2. Do have free time now from 9 AM to 3 PM to work? 3. Your daily routine plan, for example: "7 AM I wake up, 9 AM I eat breakfast, 12 PM - I go to sleep" 4. Do you prefer to work part-time or full-time? Before you can change your life, you must first change your thinking. If you are interested in working at home and you answer these questions, the company will e-mail you detailed job offer description and you can get the job. King regards, Roger Damon Recruitment Coordinator VMC Recruitment via Totaljobs.com Job Request ID: 96751467
also there was 'something' attached that my email client blocked. Odd right I tried to send it to Total Jobs and have heard nothing. I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
I once made the mistake of posting my resume on, um, glassdoor I think it was. All of a sudden I got an absolute flood of weird spam job offers. A bunch were to sell insurance. Some were MLM type scams. A few were "package forwarding" jobs. These are jobs where you agree to receive packages and then forward them to a third party. The job sounds very official with a job description and meaningless little category codes and such. I think what happens is you pay your own money to re-post packages that will turn out to have been purchased with bogus credit cards. Depending on the scam they either pay you with a "cashier's check" that turns out to be bogus (but you don't find this out for two weeks), or they simply promise to pay you bi-weekly and then don't. When the police come knocking, there you are holding a big empty bag, and the destination you mailed to was a Mailboxes Etc. Posting your resume someplace means you're looking for work, and thus possibly desparate and susceptable to such a scheme. Did the ad mention software at any time, or was it a little vague and general?
-
I once made the mistake of posting my resume on, um, glassdoor I think it was. All of a sudden I got an absolute flood of weird spam job offers. A bunch were to sell insurance. Some were MLM type scams. A few were "package forwarding" jobs. These are jobs where you agree to receive packages and then forward them to a third party. The job sounds very official with a job description and meaningless little category codes and such. I think what happens is you pay your own money to re-post packages that will turn out to have been purchased with bogus credit cards. Depending on the scam they either pay you with a "cashier's check" that turns out to be bogus (but you don't find this out for two weeks), or they simply promise to pay you bi-weekly and then don't. When the police come knocking, there you are holding a big empty bag, and the destination you mailed to was a Mailboxes Etc. Posting your resume someplace means you're looking for work, and thus possibly desparate and susceptable to such a scheme. Did the ad mention software at any time, or was it a little vague and general?
As far as I can tell I didn't apply for anything, I just registered on the Total Jobs site...:confused:
-
Hi All, I was interested to know if anyone else has had a slightly strange Email from Total Jobs. It read like a recruiter was just trying to finish my details I have pasted it below.
Quote:
Dear Mr Glenn Patton, You have received this letter because you posted your CV on TotalJobs.com. Our company is searching and attracting the best employees for the most interesting positions in most popular industries. We've found a new job opportunity you may be interested in. After reviewing your resume, we can offer you a job corresponding to your qualification. The Employeer interested in your resume and would like to ask you a few questions. 1. Would you like to work at home through the Internet? 2. Do have free time now from 9 AM to 3 PM to work? 3. Your daily routine plan, for example: "7 AM I wake up, 9 AM I eat breakfast, 12 PM - I go to sleep" 4. Do you prefer to work part-time or full-time? Before you can change your life, you must first change your thinking. If you are interested in working at home and you answer these questions, the company will e-mail you detailed job offer description and you can get the job. King regards, Roger Damon Recruitment Coordinator VMC Recruitment via Totaljobs.com Job Request ID: 96751467
also there was 'something' attached that my email client blocked. Odd right I tried to send it to Total Jobs and have heard nothing. I am getting paranoid. Cue Black Sabbath :~
-
I had this a few weeks ago. I, too, sent it to TotalJobs and got no response. I've just checked - I no longer have any copies as I had deleted it as phishing.
Yup! my copy too. Nice to know It wasn't just me!! :)