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Ask HN: Is this recruitment tactic shady?

9 pointsby mercury_crazeover 9 years ago
A couple of years ago I was about to become redundant and blanket uploaded my CV onto a number of job boards, including Monster.co.uk.<p>I quickly found a role by applying to a company directly and set my account on a number of CV sites (including Monster) to private. This is the current state of my profile. All other profiles I have across job sites have either been removed or disabled in this way.<p>Fast forward 2 years and I received an email today from a recruiter with the stock &quot;your CV out of date, I am keen to talk to you&quot; blurb. Usually this would go straight in the bin, I get about 10 of these a week so this isn&#x27;t anything new.<p>This email however was part of a chain, and the recruiter had accidentally (I assume) forwarded me an email from a company called Logic Melon with a header saying:<p><i>You requested the details for &lt;MY NAME&gt; (from Monster). The C.V. should be attached as it was downloaded. Please find the details below.</i><p>Underneath this were details of my email address, mobile phone number, current location and date the profile was last updated.<p>What it looks like is that a recruiter has paid a third party service to retrieve my CV it scraped from Monster in 2014 and get my contact details. Contact details that shouldn&#x27;t exist in the open.<p>I&#x27;m already fairly prejudiced about software recruitment firms from numerous run-ins with them in the past, so my natural response is to feel this is pretty shady behavior but should I be feeling so uncomfortable about this?<p>I understand that placing my personal details on a job board would have resulted in everyone and their mother being able to read and save it, but I didn&#x27;t really think that my CV and personal contact details would have been archived and continued to be used by recruiters long after I disabled my account. I disabled my account as an indication that I was no longer looking for work, contacting me in this way is fairly blatantly ignoring this preference.

5 comments

dudulover 9 years ago
&gt; What it looks like is that a recruiter has paid a third party service to retrieve my CV it scraped from Monster in 2014 and get my contact details. Contact details that shouldn&#x27;t exist in the open.<p>In 2014 your profile was public, so your contact information <i>did</i> exist in the open. May not be legal for a company to crawl Monster to store information though, you would have to look at Monster&#x27;s terms of service (for example LinkedIn doesn&#x27;t allow apps to store LinkedIn data, only to retrieve them via the API).<p>&gt;I understand that placing my personal details on a job board would have resulted in everyone and their mother being able to read and save it, but I didn&#x27;t really think that my CV and personal contact details would have been archived and continued to be used by recruiters long after I disabled my account.<p>Everything you put on the Internet is available to everybody until the end of times. Internalize that and you&#x27;ll be fine :)<p>&gt; I disabled my account as an indication that I was no longer looking for work, contacting me in this way is fairly blatantly ignoring this preference.<p>Recruiters don&#x27;t give a damn about your preferences. Just blacklist this guy.
J-dawgabout 9 years ago
This is interesting, and has made me think about the recruiters that contact me.<p>Early in my career I thought I wanted to be a project manager, so I tailored my CV to junior project manager jobs and uploaded it to several job sites. I haven&#x27;t really used job boards since then.<p>Now, several years later, I am regularly emailed by recruiters about senior PM &#x2F; programme manager jobs. I&#x27;ve never understood why, since I&#x27;ve never indicated any interest in this type of job.<p>It&#x27;s almost as if they have obtained an old CV and extrapolated to the type of jobs they think I would be interested now, years later.<p>I&#x27;m possibly being paranoid, but your story made me think!
dozzieover 9 years ago
For me it&#x27;s totally understandable that you dislike what the recruiter did. He (she?) was trying to sell you (with all the details you posted on the job board) as a candidate. Without your consent or even <i>knowledge</i>.<p>This is why we have laws about personally identifiable information in EU.
anon987over 9 years ago
Scraping and saving resumes is a common tactic. I know recruiters from Companies You&#x27;ve Heard Of and even their big, well known company scrapes daily.<p>As for selling the information later, that&#x27;s a different issue (and one that I agree is not ethical).
DanBCover 9 years ago
Report it.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ico.org.uk&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ico.org.uk&#x2F;</a>
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