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Auction Scam This is RANK as the # 1 SCAM/RIPOFF on the internet. The statistics is staggering.

   

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  #1  
Old 09-29-05, 12:07 PM
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ebay - Power Seller (Dave Mason)

If you received an email such as the one listed below, please do not respond. This is a scam/fraud.

Hello ScamBuster

I recently saw that you have your resume posted online. I run a very successful but small Ebay/online marketing business. In the last 5 years I have generated sales of over $10,000,000.

I am looking for an assistant/associate to take over some of the responsibilities of running the business. Your responsibilities would include:

Posting pictures and descriptions on various sites
Writing compelling descriptions of products being offered
Researching various sites to track hot items
Researching information about potential suppliers
Tracking results and orders
Basic accounting of each items profitability

The work would be done from your home and we would communicate throughout the day by phone, email, and IM.

I realize this is not exactly on point with your resume, but I will be working with you extensively to make sure you are thoroughly trained on all aspects of my business. The most important attributes in the individual that I seek is reliability, trustworthiness, integrity, and intelligence. I am looking for someone that can run all aspects of my current business, giving me the time to focus on growth.

I am offering a base salary of $1500 per week plus a percentage of profit. This could easily be over $10,000/month on good months and as little as $3,000/month in off months. I will also pay for insurance and all related expenses.

If you feel this is the right position for you please use the link below to fill out the online application. I will contact you by phone for a one on one interview.


Sincerely,

Dave Mason
Power Seller

http://www.applications.bz via
http://verasend.com.
http://www.campaignerpro.com


Here is ebay response:

Dear ScamBuster,

Thank you for taking the time out of your busy schedule to write to eBay's Powerseller Support. I am happy to address your concern regarding the email you received.

After investigating this issue, it appears that the invitation you received from a 'Dave Mason' appears to have been a spoof email. There is no eBay account registered with this name qualified to be a PowerSeller. If you still have this email, I recommend that you forward it immediately to our SPAM department at: spoof@ebay.com.

We encourage you to be very cautious of emails that ask you to submit
personal information such as your credit card number or your eBay password. If you have submitted your password through the link provided in the email you received, please change your password immediately. To change your password, follow the steps below:

1. Click on the "site map" link located at the top of any eBay page

2. On the Site Map, click the "Change my password" link. This link is located under the "Services" section in the middle column under "My eBay."

3. Once you are on the "Change Password" page, follow the instructions
that appear on that page.

Some members have reported attempts to gain access to their personal
information through email solicitations that are falsely made to appear as having come from eBay. These solicitations will often contain links to Web pages that will request that you sign in and submit information. At eBay, we identify these as 'spoofed' emails or Web sites. To be sure that you are signing into a genuine eBay Web site, look at the Address/Location area of your browser. At an eBay.com sign-in or log-in page, the URL (link) that appears in the Address/Location area of your browser will begin with

"http://signin.ebay.com/"

Please pay close attention to all characters in the address, including the forward slash (/) that follows "ebay.com". Even if the Address/Location includes the word "ebay", it may not be a genuine eBay Web site. In the future, if you receive or suspect you have received such an email, do not respond to it or click the links. Immediately forward it to spoof@ebay.com.

If you have any doubt as to whether or not the email you received is from eBay, please visit our Account Security page for more complete information on how to spot a spoof.

http://pages.ebay.com/securitycente...f_websites.html

Also, you may want to consider downloading the eBay Toolbar. The eBay
Toolbar's Account Guard feature is designed to detect potentially fraudulent (spoof) Web sites. It also lets you report such sites to
eBay.

http://pages.ebay.com/ebay_toolbar/

Marketplace safety is built upon a partnership between eBay and the Community. We thank you for your support and encourage you to continue
your active role in keeping the marketplace safe by using these educational resources.

Regards,

Jason F. R.
eBay PowerSeller Program Support
______________________________

Important: eBay will not ask you for sensitive personal information
(such as your password, credit card and bank account numbers, Social
Security numbers, etc.) in an email. Learn more account protection tips
at:

http://pages.ebay.com/help/account_protection.html
_____________________________________________

For our latest announcements, please check:

http://www2.ebay.com/aw/announce.shtml
_____________________________________________


Check out the new payment option that allows sellers to require
immediate payment through PayPal before the listing ends and offers
buyers with a convenient, retail-like purchasing experience. Learn more
about this new payment option at the link below:

http://pages.ebay.com/ImmediatePayment-faq.html

Last edited by Scrub; 06-22-08 at 05:52 PM.
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  #2  
Old 09-29-05, 03:16 PM
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Re: ebay - Power Seller (Dave Mason)

The folks behind these sites are extremely skillful and computer savvy. They have zillions of sites of which some are legitimate but most aren't. They know how to manipulate the internet. They are the SO CALLED INTERNET MARKETING COMPANIES.

These guys have no morals and are unethical. However, making money do require you to sometime compromise your morals or ethics. I am no angel.The problem here is when there is deception and you are unaware that you are participating in a CRIMINAL ACTIVITY such as misleading someone to believe that the job for which they are being offer is legit and in reality the job offer is part of a criminal activity and willl cause extreme grief or harm to that person.

Exercise extreme caution when dealing with this group all and above all, do the RIGHT THING.

The internet is not the GOLD RUSH we all think it is. There are ways to make money online however, think of one.
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  #3  
Old 10-02-05, 04:16 PM
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Re: ebay - Power Seller (Dave Mason)

There have been interesting discussion on this group. Please refer to Scam or EmployerNewsWire
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  #4  
Old 10-22-05, 10:25 AM
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Re: ebay - Power Seller (Dave Mason)

Steer clear of online job scams
July 2003

Bogus Web site for PhonyJobs.com.

Being unemployed is bad enough. But job seekers have a new worry: falling victim to criminals and con artists prowling Internet job-posting services.

Online recruiting sites such as Career Builder.com, HotJobs.com, and Monster.com have grown from job-posting boards into Web sites hosting millions of résumés and thousands of jobs. Unfortunately, crooks have also discovered online recruiting, and they’ve been busily devising new schemes to exploit job seekers.

Most scams take one of two forms: either a fraudulent offer of placement assistance or identity theft by someone posing as an employer to gain a job applicant’s personal data. "Swindlers are using the Internet to target millions," says Sheila Adkins, a spokeswoman for the Council of Better Business Bureaus in Arlington, Va.

SURFING FOR JOBS

Americans have flocked to Web sites in search of jobs in recent years. There they can explore postings and take advantage of resume-writing services and personalized coaching. Online recruiters are mum about their effectiveness for job hunters: None of three major sites we queried could cite placement success rates. Indeed, targeted résumés are generally more effective than "resume blasting," says Rebecca Smith of Fremont, Calif., founder of eResumes & Resources (www.eresumes.com).

But recently, some online recruiting sites have begun warning users about scams. "Third parties may have been using résumés and having access for purposes that were not approved," says Colleen McGrath, a Monster.com spokeswoman.

BOGUS JOB OFFERS

One of the most prevalent scams is a cyber-twist on an old con: the fraudulent job-placement scheme. Job hunters who have publicly posted their résumés receive spam e-mail touting phony employment or work-at-home business opportunities. The object is to get the victim to pay a big fee, sometimes thousands of dollars, for job-placement assistance or to start a home business. But the "job openings," often government positions, are nonexistent or can be viewed free in classified ads or online job boards.

Business-opportunity pitches are often illegal pyramid schemes, complete fiction, or thinly disguised multilevel-marketing programs requiring job hunters to make large cash investments. Among the most common "opportunities": medical billing or assembling products such as jewelry at home. (In the latter case, the finished goods are almost always rejected, and victims never recoup their outlay.)

ID ATTACKS

Personal online security probably isn’t foremost in the minds of online job seekers, but it should be, says Pam Dixon, a research fellow with the nonprofit Privacy Foundation in Denver. When investigating online job services recently, she learned that thieves posing as employers respond to résumés posted on the Web, leading job hunters to believe that they are about to be offered a position.

The catch: They must submit to a "pre-employment background check" to be hired. The applicant is asked to provide personal data, which sometimes includes checking-account numbers. The thieves then use the information to create bogus credit cards, take out loans, or drain checking accounts.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

• Don’t put your Social Security number, birth date, or personal data on a resume.

• Don’t put your home address or phone number on a resume you post publicly.

• Do post your resume anonymously. Anonymous posting allows you to remove all personal identifiers except an e-mail address provided by the Web site.

• Don’t agree online to a background check. You should first have a face-to-face interview and give written consent.

• Don’t pay up front for a job placement; most legitimate placement firms charge employers, not job seekers.
DID YOU
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