Would you hire a spammer?
I peruse through my spam folder periodically looking for anything out of the ordinary. I also examine quite closely email that are obviously spam that make it through to my inbox. This one in fact reads a lot like a job application, or a business promotion attempt gone wrong. Unlike a job application it was not addressed to anyone in particular, and was in fact sent to the SANS Internet Storm Center Handlers distribution list. The fact that the handlers are on a spam list I suppose is not surprising. What I find odd is that this person who is looking for work bought a list for the purpose of spamming it! He did not attach a resume (unlike spammer Bernard Shifman) however did place a link to his LinkedIn profile so that the recipients of his spam can read all about his having achieved his MBA. Which made me wonder if they teach spamming at college or university these days? My thoughts on the subject are that spamming is not the way to go when marketing yourself or your business. Also I am fairly certain SANS would not hire a spammer as a 'business analyst'. The handlers list has never been used to advertise any job openings. Which really has me wondering where he got it? Also where would he get the idea that spamming random people on the Internet would help his job search?
Here is the first part of the correspondence:
He is unapologetic and responds that he is being creative!
I wonder if they teach ethics in business at the place he acquired his MBA? What do you think? Creative or a spammer?
Would you hire or do business with a spammer? He appears to be in good company, has spamming become the new resume distribution method of choice?:
http://blog.dynamoo.com/2013/06/is-this-guy-moron-spammer.html
I find it depressing that the spammer appears to have in fact gotten a job roughly four weeks later. Well, according to his LinkedIn profile, so it must be true!
A recommended read on how to actually find a job without sending spam:
http://careers.theguardian.com/careers-blog/why-you-need-to-stop-spamming-employers
What is a 'Bernard Shifman':
http://web.archive.org/web/20030602190540/www.petemoss.com/spamflames/ShifmanIsAMoronSpammer.html
Cheers,
Adrien de Beaupré
Intru-shun.ca Inc.
My SANS Teaching Schedule
Comments
Anonymous
Sep 6th 2013
1 decade ago
I personally think it should go back to people having to walk into a company and make a good impression and have a real resume...Put in some effort and get some return.
That being said I just press delete when I see these emails.
Anonymous
Sep 6th 2013
1 decade ago
MORAL: Many people are still internet-clueless about this stuff. Why do you think the Nigerian scam spam is still out there? It must work occasionally...
Anonymous
Sep 6th 2013
1 decade ago
As someone else mentioned, simply delete them. Me, I submit them to spam services, also depending on the email I add trigger words to my filter, or ClamAV phishing file.
Anonymous
Sep 6th 2013
1 decade ago
As others have said, if I see someone spamming their resume, say, sending it to a linux kernel developers' mailing list, I drop their email address in the spam filters (after confirming it's not forged).
Anonymous
Sep 6th 2013
1 decade ago
Anonymous
Sep 7th 2013
1 decade ago
Anonymous
Sep 7th 2013
1 decade ago
http://www.elilabs.com/~rj/spam_o_matic.pl.html
Before the collapse, this thing worked great! If I could have cloned myself 10 times, I could have kept all of them busy, but after the collapse, nothing worked. :-(
This thing started as a script to scrape job ads from the chi.jobs newsgroup, but after the collapse, dice seemed a better resource, so I re-wrote the scraping part. The keyword processing and emailing part stayed pretty much the same.
I only had one shop get annoyed with me for spamming them, and they were spamming dice with the same job ad reworded differently every day, so of course, my script said "different job, send an email!" They were the reason for the do-not-email file.
Today, this script has evolved into a script that runs twice a day to build a table of jobs from dice. I got so tired of rummaging thru dice looking at the same ads every day, so I wrote a script to collect ad that satisfied my criteria, then presented them as a sorted table, with each job only appearing on the day it firts \showed up on dice. The result may be seen here:
http://www.elilabs.com/~rj/dice_date.html
You must actually look at the table and send your own email. :-)
Anonymous
Sep 7th 2013
1 decade ago
It's true that what constitutes "spam" is in the eye of the beholder, and I tend to have an allergic reaction to it, probably because I've been battling it to various degrees since the late 90s.
But just because "it's only one unsolicited email" doesn't mean it's not spam either, so far as I'm concerned. For me the criteria for spam is "unsolicited + bulk" - no opt-out links or can-spam-compliance disclaimers or snail-mail addresses matter a whit to me in determining if an email is spam or not. An unsolicited email sent to me isn't a problem. An email informing me I'm now on some vendor's mailing list, along with 20 or 30 other people at my company and another 40 or 50 undeliverable addresses on the dozen or so domains we get email for, and we can opt-out by clicking on some link that goes to a page that no-doubt requires, flash, java, and javascript... Well, sorry, that's spam, even if it's a "one-time mailing" because odds are good that the same company will send another "one-time-mailing" 6 months from now about some new product or offer. And frankly I don't have the time or patience to opt myself out of a list I never opted in to... on a website I don't trust... in a language I don't read... for a role-account that happens to forward to me but which should never be getting ads/marketing junk anyway.
Have I mentioned that I have an allergic reaction to spam these days? Honestly, vendors trying to sell something to the people who maintain spam filters for entire organizations (or even multiple organizations) *really* need to find a better way than unsolicited email to market/advertise. Cuz I know I'm not the only IT geek who sees yet another "targeted" but unsolicited email and says "Ah, there goes another vendor I'll never willingly do business with..." :-)
Anonymous
Sep 9th 2013
1 decade ago
While, obviously, the majority of unsolicited resumes were thrown away, the practice itself was not frowned upon or considered "spamming"; in fact, it was considered a proactive way to tap the "hidden" job market. The company that hired me needed a proofreader, but was not running an ad. If it was okay to send unsolicited resumes via snail mail in the 90?s, why is it verboten to do the same thing via email now?
Anonymous
Sep 13th 2013
1 decade ago