James McGrath

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I Got Pulled Into a LinkedIn Scam Funnel Disguised as Networking — Here’s How It Went

Opening

It started like any other day on LinkedIn. I accepted a connection request from someone with a legitimate-sounding title and a profile that seemed solid at first glance. They even wrote me a short personalized note.

I thought: okay, this could be a good networking opportunity.

What followed was a bizarre, jargon-heavy descent into resume scoring, fake optimization protocols, and a mysterious specialist who would supposedly unlock my career potential via Gmail.

The Setup

The person (we’ll call him Pascal) had a profile that appeared legit: director-level role, strategic language, and a polished summary. The conversation started typically enough: curiosity about my background, a note about job opportunities, and a question about my resume.

So far, so normal.

Then he asked if I’d heard of things like LPS, HGS, and DRT—acronyms I hadn’t encountered—and I’ve been in the industry a while. I asked what they meant. That’s when the deluge began.

The Scripted Spiral

Pascal explained that:

  • LPS stands for LinkedIn Parsing System, an optimization method for resumes.
  • HGS is the Hyperlink Guidance System, where your resume becomes an interactive tool.
  • DRT is the Dynamic Radiant Technique designed for visibility across platforms.

It was the kind of language that sounds plausible on the surface, but dig a little deeper and… it’s fluff. Glossy, impressive-sounding fluff. And then came the pitch.

“I know a specialist who can help you. Would you like me to connect you?”

I was already skeptical, but curious. So I played along.

Enter the “Specialist”

Within minutes, I got an email from a generic Gmail account. There was no company affiliation, no credentials, just the following: “Pascal told me you need a professional LinkedIn SEO OPTIMIZATION.”

It was a textbook phishing/scam setup. They wanted me to share more personal details and eventually (I assume) pay for “optimization services” based on completely made-up standards.

And to keep the performance going, I started responding with fake acronyms of my own:

  • PACS — Predictive Alignment Certainty Standard
  • LFAM — LinkedIn Federated Attention Metric
  • B.A.R.K. — Blockchain-Authenticated Resume Kernel

The kicker? The bot didn’t blink. It agreed with everything and claimed its specialist supported all of these.

The Wake-Up Call

This could’ve been dangerous. I’ve been online long enough to spot red flags, but this one was polished. The profile looked real. The timing of replies felt natural. The language was just techie enough to feel legit.

What if I had clicked a shady link, paid for services I didn’t need, or—worse—shared sensitive information?

What You Should Watch For

  • Overuse of acronyms you’ve never heard of
  • Generic follow-up messages with suspiciously fast timing
  • Push to email quickly, especially from Gmail
  • Offers of resume reviews with no real credentials
  • Pressure to connect with third parties immediately

Final Thoughts

LinkedIn is a great platform for real networking. But as scammers become more sophisticated—sometimes even using AI tools to hold fake conversations—we have to stay sharp.

Be skeptical. Trust your instincts. And if someone starts optimizing your resume for DRT without explaining what it means, run.

One response to “I Got Pulled Into a LinkedIn Scam Funnel Disguised as Networking — Here’s How It Went”

  1. David Kahn Avatar
    David Kahn

    Thanks! I just got this message from someone named Kimberly Jones.

    “I must brief this out your experience is truly impressive, and it’s surprising that someone with your background is still seeking opportunities. I’ve even identified a few openings that align with your skills. However, a potential hurdle may be the LinkedIn Parsing System (LPS), used by employers to screen resumes. If your resume lacks proper formatting, targeted keywords, or alignment with job-specific requirements, it will be rejected before reaching human eyes. Issues like verbose descriptions, weak KSA (Knowledge, Skills, Abilities) responses, or outdated templates will render your application invisible, no matter how qualified you are.

    Are you open to my suggestions/recommendations?”

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