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To: gamesmistress who wrote (34064)3/12/2004 12:50:51 PM
From: Little Joe  Respond to of 793778
 
Hit the nail on the head. About Kennedy and Bush.

Little joe



To: gamesmistress who wrote (34064)3/12/2004 1:41:51 PM
From: gamesmistress  Respond to of 793778
 
Resume fraud gets slicker and easier
Thursday, March 11, 2004 Posted: 3:38 PM EST (2038 GMT)
CNN.com

(Please, don't anyone attribute this to "the job-less recovery" or whatever. :-/)

NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Simple misrepresentation of facts on a resume is passe. Lying convincingly is in.

As companies, via background searches, try to call the bluff of
less-than-honest job seekers, candidates are resorting to more complex,
sometimes hi-tech means to hoodwink potential employers.

Some applicants are providing employers with toll-free phone numbers,
which are answered by operators of Web sites that not only offer phony
academic degrees, but also "verify" a job seeker's education.

And, in an effort to put more credibility into embellishing their
resume, some candidates are paying hackers to plug their names into a
class list database of a university they claim to have attended.

"Candidates are allegedly breaking the law to get a particular job or
promotion, and that is pretty much going to the full extent of the
limit," said Scott Pustizzi, vice president at The Human Equation,
Florida-based human resources consultants.

People could be charged with a felony for hacking into a university's
database, according to criminal lawyers. And if a false degree leads to
higher pay for a job candidate, he or she could be accused of criminal
fraud by the employer.

While the uncertain employment market is pushing job hunters to such
convoluted extremes, inadequate security for database systems and a long
list of Web sites offering fake degrees only serve to facilitate resume
fraud.

The background search firm ADP Screening and Selection Services, in a
2003 study, found that more than 50 percent of the people on whom it
conducted employment and education checks had submitted false
information, compared with about 40 percent in 2002.

This has prompted an increasing number of companies to do more thorough
background checks of candidates.

A 2003 survey of more than 200 companies by Virginia-based Society for
Human Resource Management revealed that 80 percent of them made
reference and criminal checks on their employees.

Still, some applicants continue to get smarter and slicker at defrauding
employers and are crossing legal limits to snatch jobs away from
otherwise equally qualified honest candidates.

Companies seeking to get a clearer picture of a candidate's
qualifications via background checks are uncovering other new forms of
deception.

"In the past, people just lied," said Charles Wardell, managing director
at executive search firm Korn/Ferry International. "Now, what they are
doing is they are hacking into a class of a university and putting their
name on the class list."

Wardell said he has come across cases where some candidates are paying
hackers to break into the databases of universities. If recruiting firms
called the university to check the candidate's degree, the school would
confirm it because the applicant's name would indeed appear on the list.

Breaking into a database is relatively easy because most database
servers are not password protected, said Alfred Huger, director of
engineering at anti-virus company Symantec.

So, Korn/Ferry has started requesting degrees and, in some cases, even
grades from potential candidates as proof of their academic claims.

But as corporate investigations company Kroll Inc. points out, documents
such as scholastic degrees and grades can also be concocted with the
help of numerous Web sites that provide such services.

Web sites such as fakedegrees.com help job hunters cook the facts and
even lists out-service enhancements. "Transcripts -- Coming Soon" says
one promotion on that site.

Other sites go a step further and offer verification service.

"You can select the parchment paper, the insignia and the type of
degree," said Bob Schlossnagle, president of Kroll's background
screening division. "And one of the things they [Web sites] are now
doing to enhance their service is they will give you a 1-800 number to
give your potential employer. And when employers call they will actually
confirm the degree."

Background search firms admit their job is getting harder with the
increasing level of sophistication in resume fraud.

"A good liar understands that you have to have some basis and facts to
pull off a scam," said Lester Rosen, president of California-based
Employment Screening Resources. "But it's even more dangerous when
employers unknowingly hire a fraud, thief or a crook."