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LinkedIn Job Scams

Interesting article on the variety of LinkedIn job scams around the world:

In India, tech jobs are used as bait because the industry employs millions of people and offers high-paying roles. In Kenya, the recruitment industry is largely unorganized, so scamsters leverage fake personal referrals. In Mexico, bad actors capitalize on the informal nature of the job economy by advertising fake formal roles that carry a promise of security. In Nigeria, scamsters often manage to get LinkedIn users to share their login credentials with the lure of paid work, preying on their desperation amid an especially acute unemployment crisis.

These are scams involving fraudulent employers convincing prospective employees to send them money for various fees. There is an entirely different set of scams involving fraudulent employees getting hired for remote jobs.

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Collecting and Crafting User Information from LinkedIn

Justin Angel // Penetration testing and red team engagements often require operators to collect user information from various sources that can then be translated into inputs to support social engineering […]

The post Collecting and Crafting User Information from LinkedIn appeared first on Black Hills Information Security, Inc..

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How to Crack Office Passwords with a Dictionary

Kent Ickler// TLDR: We use a custom dictionary to crack Microsoft Office document encryption. Β Then we use a custom dictionary for pwnage in LinkedIn hash database. Background: I recently got […]

The post How to Crack Office Passwords with a Dictionary appeared first on Black Hills Information Security, Inc..

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