IDBank warns about scams disguised as remote work.
News |
Cases of fraud have been registered in Armenia involving social networks and messengers promoting "easy money-making" schemes.
Individuals are
offered high earnings with supposedly no extra effort. In practice, this almost
always means one thing: they want to extract information from you that you
should never provide.
Mechanics
of the scam: from messaging to financial loss․
It all starts with a message sent via Facebook Messenger, Instagram, Telegram, or any other platform. You are offered a high-paying job that appears to require little effort. Often, this is called "work from home": assembling ballpoint pens, packing products, typing text from handwritten documents, writing reviews, or posting ads.
Next,
it is important to note: no meetings or office visits are planned. All
arrangements are offered remotely via messaging. At some point, you are asked
to provide personal information: scanned copies of your passport, bank card
details, and other data. Sometimes this becomes genuinely dangerous: they may
request the three-digit CVV code on the back of the card, the card’s expiration
date, and confirmation codes received via SMS.
The sequence of steps then proceeds in two ways:
·
You are “registered,” and it
becomes clear that money has been withdrawn from your account or a loan has
been taken out in your name.
·
You are offered to “start
work,” but first, you are asked to pay for materials, training, or access to a
“work program.” You transfer the money, and then the messaging stops.
Important
note: “Dream jobs” almost always rely on urgency.
Scammers
create a rush. Their goal is to prevent you from having time to verify
information. You are told that spaces are limited and urged to "submit
your application," "confirm your information quickly," or that
"today is the last day to apply." Any pressure regarding personal
data or money is a clear sign that the person in front of you is a scammer, not
an employer.
This
type of fraud has already been observed in Armenia. Posing as an “American
company,” scammers offer people online jobs with daily earnings in the tens of
thousands of drams. There are even more severe cases. For example, a resident
of Ejmiatsin, after “registering” for such a job, received a loan in her name
worth 360,000 drams instead of a salary.
The
legal trap.
These
schemes are dangerous because individuals often provide their own information
or send money to scammers themselves. In such cases, recovering lost funds is
significantly harder than when access is obtained without your consent.
IDBank
advises:
·
Approach offers critically.
If a deal seems too good to be true, it probably is a scam.
·
Do not share personal or
banking information via messaging. Passport details, card numbers, expiration
dates, CVV codes, and SMS codes have nothing to do with “job placement.”
·
Do not pay for materials,
training, programs, or document processing. A legitimate employer does not
start a relationship by asking you for money.
·
Verify the company. Look for
its real website, legal information, public contacts, check its presence in
official registries, and ask former employees for feedback. Do not rely solely
on the attractive story presented in a chat.
·
If you decide to “clarify the
details,” ask specific questions and request concrete answers: legal address,
contract, payment terms, contact of the responsible person, possibility of a
personal meeting or at least a video call. The more facts you request, the
faster the scammer becomes confused.
·
If you have already sent data
or transferred money, act quickly. Stop communication and immediately contact
your bank through official channels.
Remember:
financial security begins with your vigilance. Your money is safe only as long
as you have not granted access to third parties.
IDBANK
IS SUPERVISED BY THE CBA
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