Job Recruitment Website - Recruitment portal - Tianjin Hengyuan Group Co., Ltd. is recruiting Internet typists. But I don't know the authenticity. Please give me some advice, a well-informed prawn.

Tianjin Hengyuan Group Co., Ltd. is recruiting Internet typists. But I don't know the authenticity. Please give me some advice, a well-informed prawn.

Computers are so popular that everyone can type and writers can surf the Internet.

Use your toes and think about where you need someone to type?

These places post advertisements and offer such high salaries, but they still need to recruit people from everywhere?

If you can give you money just by typing with your mouse, how can there be such a person in the world who can’t find a job?

You can copy and paste on a computer, but do you still need to hire a typist with a high salary?

And if you can earn so much by typing online, then how can those top students who study hard in a poor family feel so embarrassed?

In this kind of part-time job, there are only a few types of deceptive tricks. You need to know the right ones first.

1. Claim to be recruiting, and then ask you to pay money in various names - deposit, security deposit, filing fee, integrity deposit, clothing fee, physical examination fee, training fee.

Whether it’s online, on TV or in newspapers, you should have heard about the tactics of shady intermediaries. Do you have to cry and shout to pay those people?

2. The self-proclaimed mission allows you to post spam advertisements everywhere, recruit more people, and pull people layer by layer to be fooled.

Now you can see why there are so many job advertisements, and the ones who do it. How much does it cost to recruit someone? Why don't you come to me for such a good thing?

3. Claim to be a typist and ask you to pay the express fee and postage first, and then the other party will blacklist you and make you disappear.

Even if many administrators know it, it is not safe. For example, in those advertisements that pretend to be publishing houses, or fictitious publishing houses, the questioner and the respondent all praise the authenticity and reliability of a certain publishing house, without exception, asking you to believe it and pay the money.

4. They claim to be posting, asking you to register with your mobile phone and enter a verification code, personalize your signature, secretly customize high-priced information services, and charge your phone bill until the phone is shut down.

For example, you should be careful of those places that ask you to enter your mobile phone number, or try to defraud your mobile phone number. Do not post your identity information or mobile phone number everywhere, for fear that it will not fall into the hands of insurance, intermediaries, fraud, and pyramid schemes.

5. Claims to make money, gives you a suspicious link, and allows you to contribute click-through rates and popularity.

Is it worth spending so much energy to click on these ads, paying for Internet and electricity bills, and wasting your eyesight, energy and time?

6. They claim to be verified, ask you to provide your bank card, and trick you into entering your password to steal the balance inside.

The security of personal information cannot be overemphasized, so be careful. It has been reported many times on TV and online, but some people still want to believe it. Maybe we should let them be fooled a few more times as a kind of education.

7. If you claim to be an entrepreneur, you will be asked to recruit people to get offline. You will get a certain amount of return as much as you claim to invest.

Have you ever watched the episode of "Chop Knife Gate" in "Wulin Gaiden"?

If you buy three knives, you will be a black iron brother, if you buy 30 knives, you will be a bronze brother, if you buy 300 knives, you will be a silver brother, if you buy 3,000 knives, you will be a gold brother, and there are diamond brothers on top,

The value of the purchased goods deviates from the value of the used goods, and they rely on pulling people's hair to get offline.

No matter how they call themselves or advertise, they are all pyramid schemes.

8. Self-proclaimed part-time job, sending you poisonous content, infecting your chat tools, and sending money-making advertisements to your friends.

Some time ago, a friend encountered this: the other party used a chat tool to pretend to be a friend, claiming to be in a car accident and asking him to send money to save his life. Fortunately, he discovered it was a scam in time.

After seeing so many lessons learned from part-time typing scammers, you still want to be deceived?

Even if you take a chance, don’t complain that no one warned you if you were fooled.

Are you here to find those people upstairs and downstairs who deliberately set their username to q to send you advertisements?

You will understand just by looking at their products and systems.

These online transfer companies, which are branded as new technologies, mostly require participants to pay dozens, hundreds, or thousands of yuan to purchase memberships or products as entry fees, and then ask you to continue recruiting people. Participate, and a share of the proceeds will be given to you. Such an obvious transfer has actually attracted many people on the Internet who want to join SOHO.

For example, those who posted advertisements before, everyone claims to make money and wants you to join.

There is a fee of around 300 to join, and members can earn commissions as they develop and continue to upgrade, using a multi-level compensation system. Because the company has products and the website production looks very formal, it can quickly gather a large number of members. Think about it carefully, can this one-time expense really support the development of a formal company? Secondly, I don’t know if the members who have joined have carefully looked at the company’s products. I've seen it, it's rubbish, it lacks a foundation for long-term development, it's not for making money, and not many people will be willing to pay that price. How many of those paid members are real users?