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428

"Interview fraud" has become more and more common over the years.

Archive: https://archive.today/KMy5x

From the post:

>A man was perplexed after noticing that a new hire at his company was not the same person who'd interviewed for the position - but no one else on his team seemed to notice. 'The guy who started today is clearly not the guy we interviewed and no one else has noticed,' the man - OP for short - titled a post on Reddit's r/AskHR forum, further specifying he was based in Wyoming. The man went on to describe how a couple weeks back he had 'helped' his team with the hiring process for a new role, ultimately settling on a candidate he had 'really liked.'

"Interview fraud" has become more and more common over the years. Archive: https://archive.today/KMy5x From the post: >>A man was perplexed after noticing that a new hire at his company was not the same person who'd interviewed for the position - but no one else on his team seemed to notice. 'The guy who started today is clearly not the guy we interviewed and no one else has noticed,' the man - OP for short - titled a post on Reddit's r/AskHR forum, further specifying he was based in Wyoming. The man went on to describe how a couple weeks back he had 'helped' his team with the hiring process for a new role, ultimately settling on a candidate he had 'really liked.'

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

Did "Josh" have a DIEguy interview in his place, knowing full well that the real Josh would never get the job because he's White?

[–] 1 pt

That is a very good question. I was thinking that myself.

[–] 1 pt

That's really the only plausible explanation I can think of. "Josh" knows the answers to the questions but is really a professional interviewer.