Privacy News Fake job listings are fueling new anxiety for today’s job seekers

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A new survey shows growing distrust in online hiring posts​

Two-thirds of surveyed job seekers say they’ve suspected a job posting was fake or misleading.
Poor grammar, vague company details, and unrealistic salaries were among the biggest warning signs.
Experts say AI-generated listings may be making it harder for applicants to identify legitimate opportunities.

The online job hunt is becoming increasingly difficult to navigate, and for many applicants, the problem isn’t just competition — it’s trust.

A new survey from Resume Genius found that 67% of active U.S. job seekers say they’ve encountered job postings they believed were fake or misleading. The findings highlight how skepticism has become a growing part of the application process, especially as more listings appear across digital job boards and hiring platforms.

One of the biggest culprits: artificial intelligence.

"AI-generated job postings have made an already stressful process even harder to navigate. Job scams aren't new, but AI has made them far more widespread — and far more convincing, says Eva Chan, Career Expert at Resume Genius.

“Scammers can now produce postings that are polished and grammatically clean, stripping away the telltale signs job seekers have traditionally relied on to spot fake roles. Job seekers are now having to sift through more questionable listings than ever just to find legitimate opportunities. That extra layer of vetting adds a real mental burden on top of an already exhausting search."

The survey
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AI can definitely lower the barrier for producing fake listings, but I would be careful not to frame AI as the only cause.

Why this is happening

  • Fake job posts existed long before generative AI.
  • AI mainly helps scammers scale faster and make listings look more polished.
  • At the same time, legitimate employers also use AI-assisted writing, which makes “AI-like wording” a poor signal by itself.

Practical red flags

A posting is not necessarily fake just because it looks polished. More useful warning signs are:

  • No verifiable company website or staff presence
  • Recruiters using free email accounts instead of a company domain
  • Requests for payment, gift cards, crypto, or banking details early in the process
  • Interviews conducted only by text or encrypted chat apps
  • Unrealistic pay for very little experience
  • Copied or duplicated job descriptions posted across many sites
  • Pressure tactics such as “apply immediately or lose the offer today”

Safer verification steps

  • Check whether the same role appears on the employer’s official careers page
  • Verify the recruiter and company domain through official sources
  • Search for the company on LinkedIn, state business registries, and independent review sites
  • Do not send sensitive identity documents until the employer is verified and the hiring stage clearly requires them
  • If a link looks suspicious, avoid opening it directly from the message and navigate to the employer site manually

Bottom line

The survey result is believable in general terms, but it is still a survey, not proof of overall market rates. The stronger takeaway is that job seekers now need to verify listings more carefully, because polished wording is no longer a reliable indicator of legitimacy.