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Scam safety category

Job & Money Scams

Fake job offers, task scams, check scams, reshipping scams, remote work scams, and easy-money messages. Use this category to compare suspicious patterns before you click, reply, pay, scan, download, or share private information.

How to use this job & money scams section

The Job & Money Scams section is built for people who received something suspicious and need a clear, calm way to check it. Instead of guessing, search the wording, compare the request with known scam patterns, and verify through the official source before taking action.

Job and money scams use easy income, remote work, task commissions, fake checks, reshipping, or upfront fees.

The safest verification path is to apply through official company career pages and verify recruiters through known company channels.

Avoid depositing checks from strangers, paying to unlock wages, buying equipment through a link, or accepting jobs through messaging apps only.

Common signs across this category

  • Unexpected contact that creates urgency, fear, excitement, embarrassment, or secrecy.
  • A request to click, reply, call back, scan a QR code, pay a fee, download a file, or share sensitive information.
  • Logos, names, screenshots, or caller ID details that look familiar but do not prove the request is real.
  • A path that pulls you away from the official website, official app, verified account, printed bill, or known phone number.
  • Pressure to act before you can ask someone else, check your account, or compare the message with official information.

Guides currently in this category

This section currently includes guides such as Fake Check Job Scam, Reshipping Job Scam, Remote Data Entry Scam, Equipment Purchase Job Scam, Task Commission Scam, Mystery Shopper Scam, Fake Check Job Scam, Reshipping Job Scam. Each guide is written to explain the pattern without accusing private people, accounts, or phone numbers.

Important note about suspicious patterns

A suspicious pattern does not automatically prove that a specific person, number, profile, or business is fraudulent. DontClickYet focuses on education, pattern recognition, and safer next steps. When in doubt, verify through official websites, official apps, known phone numbers, account dashboards, statements, or trusted professionals.

Extra checks for job & money scams

This category deserves careful attention because it often involves fake remote jobs, task commissions, check scams, reshipping offers, equipment-purchase tricks, and pay-to-unlock earnings. The message may not look sloppy. Many suspicious messages now use clean formatting, realistic logos, familiar names, and believable timing. That is why DontClickYet focuses on the requested action, not just the design.

Common examples in this area include:

Best verification step: Apply through the official company website, verify recruiter email domains, and be cautious if the job lives only inside a messaging app.

When reviewing a possible job & money scams message, separate the claim from the contact method. A real company, platform, bank, agency, employer, marketplace, or app should still let you confirm the issue through its official website, official app, account dashboard, printed statement, verified profile, or known phone number.

DontClickYet uses safer wording on purpose. A guide can say a pattern is commonly associated with scams without accusing a specific private person, profile, email address, or phone number. That keeps the site useful, responsible, and focused on practical safety decisions.

Job offer safety checks

Real job opportunities should have a verifiable company, clear role, normal interview process, official email domain, and written hiring details. Be cautious when a job appears only through text, Telegram, WhatsApp, or a personal email account.

Warning signs include paying to start work, depositing checks for equipment, reshipping packages, buying crypto, completing paid tasks to unlock earnings, or giving sensitive identity details before the employer is verified.