Safety guide

Fake AI Job Interview Message

How to spot fake job messages that ask for money, equipment fees, or identity documents.

Edited by Omer Aktas

Listen to this page Reads only the article text, not the menu, footer, or right rail.

Ready to read this guide aloud.

Beginner rule: Use AI as a patient helper, not as the final authority. Keep private details out, slow down before clicking, and check important information through official sources.

Short answer

How to spot fake job messages that ask for money, equipment fees, or identity documents.

Why this risk matters

Job seekers can be targeted when they are hopeful. AI can make fake messages look polished, patient, official, and personal. A message can be dangerous even when it has no spelling mistakes.

A simple everyday example

A message offers a remote job but asks for a deposit or ID upload first.

First safe prompt

Check this job interview message. List signs it may be fake and what to verify.”

Beginner rule

Stop before you click, pay, reply, download, scan, upload, or share a code. A real company can wait while you verify.

Useful examples

Ask AI to list red flags, rewrite the message in plain English, create a verification checklist, and prepare questions for the official company.

What to check first

Check the sender, link, phone number, payment request, attachment, deadline, grammar, account name, and whether the request came through a normal official channel.

Safety note

Real jobs should not ask you to pay fees or send sensitive documents through unverified chat.