Article 3YDS7 Government seizes fraudulent military recruitment sites

Government seizes fraudulent military recruitment sites

by
Seamus Bellamy
from on (#3YDS7)

milkid-sailor2.jpg

Individuals willing to lay down their lives-or at least risk them for the promise of steady employment-shouldn't have to put up with phony websites designed to snag and sell their personal information. It's an opinion that's apparently shared by the FTC.From Gizmodo:
The FTC filed a complaint in federal court today charging that two Alabama-based companies, Sun Key Publishing and Fanmail.com, made roughly $11 million selling data to private schools. The companies would contact the potential recruits and encourage them to enroll at specific for-profit schools under the false impression that the U.S. military endorsed the organizations. If the mark sounded interested, Sun Key would sell that recruit's information for anywhere between $15 and $40. Tens of thousands of people visited the websites every month.The defendants were charged with violating the FTC Act as well as the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule and reached a settlement with the government. But they won't have to give back that $11 million because of their "inability to pay."
The evil geniuses behind the scam used websites with the web addresses Army.com and Air-Force.com (apparently Army.com has been privately owned since 1995,) to lure in hopeful candidates looking to work a job that never makes you think about what you should wear to work. According to Gizmodo, for the time being, the FTC is staying quiet on which schools were benefiting from the ill-gotten personal information. Chances are, as the FTC develops their case against the digital imposters and their clients, we'll learn more about the who-did-whats.Image via DoDlive
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