Andy Cummings
September 10, 2020
Students are receiving emails asking them to apply for a job that they can perform a few hours per week from home. These emails appear to come from a well-known corporation, someone claiming they’re a professor, etc. The work itself is clerical, administrative, personal assistant, etc. – and the pay is stated to be weekly, often in advance. Who doesn’t like money, right? Easy money is cool, but unexpected dangers lurk in these waters
Who’s behind this? These emails are being sent by money-laundering gangs who have stolen enormous sums of money (via various means such as hacking, Business Email Compromises, ransomware, etc.) which is sitting in a bank-account here in the US – and they need the help of local money-mules to transfer the money as quickly as possible elsewhere to make the funds disappear.
Look for unusual email-addresses AND reply-to addresses. Job-scams are almost always from – or to – a free email account of some kind, for example Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, iCloud (which is Apple), etcetera. One might also see that it was sent from a Gmail-address but a reply gets sent to, for example, an AOL email-address – this should be a huge red flag to you.
If the sender claims to be recruiting for a corporation, no legitimate company would use a Gmail-address. Similarly, you would expect that a legitimate UTD “professor” would use their UTD email-address, not some free email-service.
We look out for each other at UTD, so please help foster awareness of this issue among your fellow Comets.