✅ Do not reply (even to say “stop”)
✅ Block the number
✅ Delete the message
✅ Report it as spam using your phone/carrier tools
What these fake “remote job” texts usually look like
These messages often claim to be from a recruiter or hiring team and include some combination of:
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Remote / part-time work
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High daily pay for minimal time
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“Work from anywhere” / “flexible hours”
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Mentions of big, trusted brand names to sound legitimate
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A request to reply by text for “job details”
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No real application process (no official careers page link, no company email, no verifiable recruiter identity)
Example (masked for safety)
“Hi, this is [Name] from the [Company] hiring team. We saw your profile on several job boards… remote part-time opportunity… 90 minutes a day… earn $200–$500/day… Reply ‘Job Details’ to +1 (###) ###-##84.”
If it feels vague, too easy, or too good to be true — treat it as unsafe.
How this type of job fraud works
Many scammers are skipping email and going straight to SMS text messages, because people tend to read and respond quickly.
The pattern is usually the same:
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A random text claims to be from a recruiter or hiring team
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They say they found you on multiple job boards
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They promise easy remote work, short hours, and high pay
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They name-drop brands to create credibility
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You’re asked to reply by text for “job details”
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There’s no official application and no way to verify who’s contacting you
Once you respond, it typically escalates into:
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Requests for personal information (DOB, address, SSN, photos of ID, etc.)
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Fake “training” or “onboarding”
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“Task-based” work tied to payment apps or crypto
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Requests for money, “fees,” or “equipment” payments
Red flags that instantly give it away
If you spot even one of these, stop engaging.
🚩 Unsolicited text messages
Legitimate employers do not cold-text job seekers with job offers.
🚩 Vague job description
Generic language (“increase product visibility,” “customer engagement”) with no real role, team, or responsibilities.
🚩 Unrealistic pay for minimal work
Promises like $200–$500 per day for 60–90 minutes are a major warning sign.
🚩 Text-only communication
A real employer will direct you to an official application process — not conduct hiring entirely via SMS.
🚩 Big-name company bait
Scammers often mention well-known companies or staffing firms to borrow credibility.
🚩 Odd requirements or strange wording
Age limits, “good character” language, awkward phrasing, or unusual rules are not standard hiring practices.
What to do if you receive a text like this
✅ Delete the message
✅ Block the number
✅ Do not reply (even to say “stop”)
✅ Report it as spam using your phone/carrier tools
If you want to verify whether an opportunity is real:
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Go directly to the company’s official careers page (not a link in the text) and search for the role
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Search the exact wording of the message online to see what others are reporting
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Forward the details to us at [email protected] (screenshots help) and we’ll take a look
What NOT to do (very important)
❌ Do not reply
❌ Do not click links
❌ Do not share personal information
❌ Do not provide banking info or payment app details
❌ Do not pay for training, equipment, background checks, or “access to work”
No legitimate employer will require you to pay to get hired.
Why we’re sharing this
Job fraud attempts are becoming more frequent and more convincing — especially targeting people searching for remote work, flexible jobs, or extra income.
At Rat Race Rebellion, protecting job seekers is just as important to us as sharing legitimate work-from-home opportunities.
If a “job”:
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Sounds too good to be true
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Comes via an unexpected text
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Skips a real application process
…it almost always isn’t legitimate.
Stay cautious, stay informed — and remember: real remote jobs don’t recruit this way.
Still unsure? Send it to us at [email protected] and we’ll help you sanity-check
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