Job at USA in Uranium energy whether it is true?
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@MattSpeller I dont even get any call from Linkedin.I used to apply in many websites for job
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@Lakshmana go to uraniumenergy.org
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The requested URL / was not found on this server. That’s all we know.
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@Lakshmana said:
I got mail from this mail id:[email protected]
They don't even have a website. That alone should have told you everything that you needed to know.
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Definitely not a company. Not the slightest chance.
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@Lakshmana said:
@MattSpeller I dont even get any call from Linkedin.I used to apply in many websites for job
I also have to apply for good jobs, but Linkedin can give you more credibility when they search for your name
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The address is provided like this
URANIUM ENERGY CORPORATION
500 North Shoreline
Ste. 800N
Corpus Christi, TX 78401 USA
Tel: +16467418237
http://www.uraniumenergy.com -
@Lakshmana said:
The address is provided like this
URANIUM ENERGY CORPORATION
500 North Shoreline
Ste. 800N
Corpus Christi, TX 78401 USA
Tel: +16467418237
http://www.uraniumenergy.comTheir website that they give doesn't match the email. Obviously that's a phishing attack.
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But where is the EMAIL from?
if from "[email protected]" that's SPAM.
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Everytime this comes usual in my gmail.
How to get rid of this fake mails? -
Use the Mark As Spam functions in gmail.
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@Lakshmana said:
Everytime this comes usual in my gmail.
How to get rid of this fake mails?Like all of us, you learn to recognize SPAM and not to even read it. For example, as soon as you saw a job offer, you should not have continued. Or as soon as you saw that the email and the web URL did not match, you should have not continued reading. You should have marked as SPAM so that Google recognizes it.
Filtering SPAM will always require some amount of human decision making. No technology can do all of this for you. You need to learn to recognize when you get an offer from someone you've not talked to before or what a fake email address looks like. These are just computer user basics that everyone, not just people in IT, need to have.
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Thank you
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There is no panacea. We all get SPAM all of the time. The trick that they use is that they offer you something that you want (like a high paid senior job in the US) that is too good to be true. But you want it to be true so much that you are tempted to ignore the obvious signs that it couldn't possibly be real (you didn't apply for the job, that's the wrong pay scale for entry level helpdesk, you aren't qualified to work in nuclear energy, they asked for private data before even knowing if you were interested or a real person, you never interviewed, their website doesn't exist, the details they provide don't match the info of the person who contacted you, they didn't talk about visa hassles, etc.) Because of this the logic of the brain shuts down. That's why it is important to look for the signs and delete it before you get sucked in to the tricks.
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Like the emails I get that say "You can have any woman you like." I'd love to believe it, but it's obviously spam because I'm hideous and overweight.
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hello guys
I have received a message from this company and send it my documents to him
what can i do
i sent my passport pic
tell me what can i do now -
@shy12302 said:
hello guys
I have received a message from this company and send it my documents to him
what can i do
i sent my passport pic
tell me what can i do nowPrepare to have your identity stolen.
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tell me what can i do
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Will I be in danger
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