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CyberCoders review: Scam Job Postings 33

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4:56 pm EDT
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Every job posted by this company that has been a good fit for my experience & background has never yielded a call or follow-up from the company.

The jobs must be scams because CyberCoders never, ever, ever calls you once you've submitted your resume.

Don't believe all the jobs they post on CareerBuilder & other job boards. They don't exist!

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33 comments
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Douglas Sankary
, US
Jun 18, 2018 2:04 pm EDT

No one from this company returns calls or emails. They are a scam.

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fitta
, US
Feb 15, 2016 1:43 am EST
Verified customer This comment was posted by a verified customer. Learn more

In doing some data analysis of dice I find that out of 28 thousand job listings for modern development languages nation wide, Cyber Coders has 4400+ of those. The vast majority of agencies have under 100 job listings on dice. Cyber Coders is listing so many it seem impossible that they can manage that many. I've made a big data project out of this and can see clearly that they are by far listing the most jobs than anyone else. Robert Half is 2nd with almost 2500 jobs.

It is my opinion that they create jobs in odd locations looking to gather resumes. I notice nearly identical job listings in widely different locations of which I cannot find a company that has offices in those locations. It is my opinion that they reuse job descriptions nearly verbatim in different parts of the USA, for which there is no real job.

I must clarify that I have no solid proof of this. This is just big data science being applied to tens of thousands of job listings with word analysis. Over and over, their jobs match with over 95% commonality that cannot be explained by a single company having multiple office locations. There are in fact many job postings online that have over 95% commonality which can also be mapped to a company that has offices in those locations. Cybercoders appears to be the exception.

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Vicki Stillwell
, US
Jan 22, 2016 5:42 pm EST

Has anyone ever gotten a mortgage underwriting job with these folks? They have posted tons of jobs, of which I have applied for several whereas I was more than qualified and met all requirements. Never hear one word from these folks. In reading all of the previous posts, I feel rather foolish. Shame on the these folks if the previous posts are correct. !

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tonyroger
, US
Sep 02, 2015 12:03 am EDT

They are also in close contact with hiring managers. If you have couple of offers they will force you take the first one. There are cases where i got a offer company A which i was not interested and was called by company B but they would get it cancelled by letting the hiring manager at company B telling them i not interested which is not the case.

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LeMag
SomeCity, US
Feb 26, 2015 9:15 pm EST

I wish that they could be forced to remove their fraudulent listings. Consider the following:

http://www.[redacted].com/r/CyberCoders/nationwide/CyberCoders-Cyber-Coders-Inc-CC-jobs-Resume-farming-Fraudulant-personal-information-coll-701029

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A. Grentlieb
St. John, CA
Jan 29, 2015 1:03 pm EST

Same story here. Unsolicited email offering great job at ridiculous salary all work at home. CyberCoders is definitely a scam. Did anyone notice that all of the comments have a negative 1 as if someone went through the trouble of attempting to discredit all negative material? Creepy.

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AlexU
, US
Nov 04, 2014 4:39 pm EST

I had the distinct misfortune of searching for jobs on google, and stumbling across one of CyberCoders' Ads. Having worked for several major corporations that use staffing agencies for contingent workers, I (naively) assumed that CyberCoders was contracted to provide workers for the company in the listing.

It turned out they were not.

I took the bait, filled out their online form and submitted my resume. I actually did get an interview with the company, but only when the CyberCoders recruiter nefariously hunted down the manager for the job posting via social networking (aka, Stalking), and bypassed their HR department. The real problem came when the manager was actually interested in me, because I was a good fit, but she thought that I was "with" CyberCoders, just as I thought CyberCoders was contracted by her company. But, alas, they were not.

In fact, I later learned (after visiting the company's website) that they have a clearly stated policy of not hiring via recruiters - they have their own recruiting department, something the CyberCoders recruiter obviously knew, and intentionally bypassed (whether or not they are trained to do this, I do not know).

Also, hidden in their site's "Terms of Use" is a nice little paragraph informing you that any information you upload (aka, your skills, your resume) can be used by them, with impunity, in perpetuity. They can use your stuff forever and there's nothing you can do about it... and you can't post bad stuff about them on their site... read about it here (#4): http://www.cybercoders.com/terms/

That angers me, to put it kindly.

CyberCoders hijacked my job search, hijacked the employer's search, all just to steal a piece of the pie. The painful part is, I would have found this job listing myself had I perused a couple lines further down on the google results page.

Stay away from this company. It seems like this should be illegal... why it isn't, I have no idea...

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GG1234
Alva, US
Jul 22, 2014 8:32 am EDT

I agree with the comments mentioned above. I was contacted by Robin Napier from CyberCoders about a position. She asked me to resubmit my current resume. Then she asked me to answer several questions. A couple of weeks went by and she called me and left a message to call her about the job. I thought she had good news. I tried calling her back. I emailed her a few times over the next 3 weeks with no response. I spoke to another colleague and he said that he did not know why she never called me back. Maybe the job was cancelled. Yesterday, I see the same job posted on LinkedIn.com by CyberCoders again. Know I sent both of them an email. Robins reply was that I did not live in the area. I live in 2 places and was just up in her area. Obviously, this is total BS. What allows them to play with peoples lives. They are not the only recruiters doing this. Robert Half also sucks to work with...

Someone needs to stand up to this BS and stop it. When are Americans going to fight to get our country back from big business and from Washington? I bet George Washington would be fighting to stop what D.C. has become. There are millions of people out of work and corporations are not hiring over 50 group. But we send billions around to world to help others... Well Washington, I want my money back. I need it to pay my bills. Wake up America...

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David from San Jose, CA
San Jose, US
Apr 02, 2014 4:05 pm EDT

I agree. There is no way they have 50 jobs on Linked In when no one else has those positions. You can see the same positions for 2 or 3 years. I have no idea what their business model is. They also have 50 jobs on Dice and no one else has more than 2 or 3. You expect a lot of fake stuff on Dice. I am stunned Linked In allows this level of false job postings. Linked In used to be the cleanest place in which to look for jobs. Linked In's credibility took a big hit when Cyber Coder started posting there.

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seatled
Seattle, US
Mar 06, 2014 10:47 am EST
Verified customer This comment was posted by a verified customer. Learn more

I responded to two Cybercoders emails and both times I was given a phone screen from a "hiring manager" supposedly at their clients office. Both "hiring managers" seemed to be located in India and asked questions not even remotely related to the position I thought I was responding too. After the second encounter I realized they were following a standard script and that the positions probably did not exist. With twenty years of C++ experience working for some of the biggest companies in the U.S. in both New York and Seattle I think it's safe to assume I know the definition of polymorphism, can we get on with the real questions please. Therein lies the problem the "hiring manager" doing the "technical interview" didn't even know what an API was, even though the position was supposedly for an API architect. At that point I ended the phone screen, but that was not the end of my contact with Cybercoders. The recruiter repeatedly sent me vicious, trash talking emails. Avoid them at all cost.

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anonymous229
Huntington Beach, US
Feb 05, 2014 8:53 pm EST
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Lots of B.S. and Scams from this group. They have been picking up kids and systematically letting go Senior recruiters (by Voice Mail no less...as they lack true professionalism to look someone in the eye...lol!) because they are cheap.
Golledge CEO is a joke, liar, and full of B.S. ...not to be trusted. Watch out CEO Pete from On Assignment who acquired them. CYA...Be wise to not trust Golledge.

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mcarter76
Los Angeles, US
Jan 24, 2014 4:27 am EST

I have always ignored CyberCoders listings in the past, but recently applied to an opening and got a call back right away. The recruiter was friendly and seemed well versed in terms of the qualifications. It resulted in an interview the following day, which went okay. We talked afterwards and she was pleasant and easygoing -- we even shared a few laughs. Unfortunately I haven't received an offer letter yet. The only problem for me was when other agents in the company suddenly recognized my desirability. I hate it when greedy head hunters blow up my phone without waiting for me to return their call.

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Adrian**
Supermanville, US
Oct 18, 2013 7:41 pm EDT

SpamCoders have been sending me the same job description for 3 years. I know my local industry extremely well and the jobs they advertise absolutely do not exist. Moreover, CyberCoders have never answered the phone when I've called, never returned a voice mail, nor replied to an e-mail, nor followed up on an application. A complete and total dead end waste of time.

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mickey83
, CA
Aug 11, 2013 12:02 pm EDT

I haven't gone through all the complaints above, but i will put in my 2 cents worth. All the jobs I have applied for were a good fit for me, but the ball never rolled forward, every time I applied for a job, sometimes they would simply say, im not a good fit or they would never follow up. yet they send emails everyday jobs that match your skillset. quite annoying actually.

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RK Tor
, US
May 01, 2013 11:12 am EDT

Cyber Coders is just gathering data to sell. I once applied to a tech job listing which seemed to be a side step from my current position. On the job posting there was no mention of a company name. They emailed me back the next day and the recruiter wanted me to send more info. Sent it and waited a week with no response. I called the recruiter to see what was up. She wouldn't give me much info but she did name the company that I was supposedly applying for. GUESS WHAT?! She named the company I ALREADY work for, which I know for a fact ISN'T HIRING and has NEVER done business with Cyber Coders. She tried to scam me with a fake job posting of my OWN JOB. When I pointed this out to her she hung up on me. The fake job posting was removed within the hour, probably to avoid legal action. AVOID THIS PLACE AT ALL COSTS. They will lie straight to your face.

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carinrader
yabbado, US
Nov 20, 2012 2:29 pm EST

How to deal with cybercoders once they contact you for a job. If the description is a good match, the best approach is do a search for the company and apply direct if possible. Cybercoders commission is complete BS and puts the candidate out of reach of most companies. I went on several interviews by going around cybercoders recruiters. The jobs exist, they just job-block you at CC.

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sj Mark
Fremont, US
Sep 06, 2012 11:37 pm EDT

hay its and scam cybercoder is fake i to agree plzz dont apply to this dice corp need to take action at this company or scam we all need to sue them iam going to file a case against cybercoder need you all guys help .will update you for tha action

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Tg2012 twe89009
Los Angeles, US
Aug 29, 2012 10:50 pm EDT

Have you happened to notice that if you apply for a cybercoders job that you get spam emails for tech stuff and that you also get hit up by other recruiters? That is because they resell your information. It is in their business model. I am not going to outline the details of how I know this, but be forewarned that if you submit your information to CyberCoders that your info is being resold over and over again. I filed a complaint with Dice and Monster to get them banned but I think they need more people like everyone here to send them your complaints so they can get kicked off of job boards. They saturate the market and make it impossible to find real jobs in all the muck they create in job sites. I spend half my time looking around their spammed job postings to find a real contract. Band together people, don't just post a rant here, go out and tell Monster, Dice, or any job board for that matter, what is really going on!

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Oldr&wisr
Newark, US
Jan 11, 2012 1:52 pm EST

I have spoken with a very friendly Cybercoder rep who got back to me to tell me that the company was looking for somebody for a better fit. I was more than qualified for the job but it seems that being in my 50s and being unemployed for over a year is probably why I was blown off. It's a small world, and in my field, everyone seems to know one another so maybe these "tech recruiters" should wise up and realize that they're not needed. Also these employers should respect experience and stop age discriminating.

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MileHighTechGuy
Golden, US
Dec 01, 2011 1:17 am EST
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I've had mixed results with CyberCoders. Generally they send out emails that aren't at all a good fit, so they obviously use a lot of automation that isn't very accurate. I tend to ignore most of them.

I applied to a Product Mgr job in Colorado through their site today after seeing a posting on Dice, and already received a call the same day from the recruiter who posted the job that they are going to submit me for the job. The recruiter sounded pretty knowledgeable about the client ogranization.

So I guess it depends. We'll see what happens.
~Jeff

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Mattiek
Los Angeles, US
Aug 08, 2011 5:43 pm EDT
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I've responded to listings at Cybercoders, Monster and The Ladder, and I can tell you that Cybercoders is no different than anyone else. The criteria is almost always the same: they are seeking professionals with college degrees (often unnecessary for the work), willing to work for less pay than anyone with that skill set would usually agree, and willing to travel far outside a reasonable commute area. While it's been several years since I've been job-searching (I'm quite comfortable at a job I landed through a colleague's recommendation –not from a job site), I still get their emails almost weekly. I was called several times and offered interviews with companies looking to hire me in the position I was seeking and in a pay range with which I was comfortable. The caveat was always the location for me which was a deal breaker. On several occasions, recruiters sent me into 100% commission interviews when I had specified I had no interest in them, but when I complained (loudly) I discovered that the company had probably been untruthful in their listing with the Cybercoders recruiters. The same thing happened at Monster. With any job site, you need to be as proactive as possible, and your level of difficulty becomes a factor (as a previous poster noted). If you turn down a number of recommended interviews, you automatically hit their DNC list, because they view you as wasting their time -especially since their pay is commission based. And in this economy they can afford to be choosy. TheLadders was actually the best of the bunch, but was very costly and it is a very crowded job market at the top (they specialize in jobs that pay $100K/year or more). I went on more interviews through them than anyone else (even Monster), and got a job offer within three months of searching (this was at the nadir of the entertainment business downturn in 2009), but it didn't materialize as the company's business plan changed –still, it was legit. The best prepared people in the job-search market have planned for long term unemployment by saving money to float them through a sluggish hiring period. People with families often don't have that luxury. I know that I was afraid to take jobs that were beneath my previous pay and experience level because I didn't want them to screw up my unemployment benefits, but the longer you're out of the market, the less value you maintain to future employers, creditors and recruiters.

Basically, I think you get out of any job placement service what you put into it, and you have to be enthusiastic, qualified and flexible. Understand that there are a lot of managers seeking base positions these days because 10% of the country is out of work. Be clear about what's acceptable and what isn't but don't have a long list of no-can-dos. If you've been out of work for a long time you should be amenable to changing fields. It's not the job recruiter's fault that you spent ten years in a job that's been farmed out, eliminated or scaled back. It's not the recruiter's fault that you spent a fortune on a college degree that isn't worth very much, either. On the other hand, that college degree makes you 20% more employable across the board -even if you apply for a job in a completely different industry than that which your degree would best service.

I had to switch industries and at first was worried about the pay decrease, but within a year I was back up to my peak pay. I'm now in a position to be hiring (and firing), and I understand what was a mystery to me not long ago: that I'm getting resumes from people who are over-qualified to the nth degree for a position that pays $10/hour. Why? Because staying busy is better than atrophy. You develop bad habits when you're out of work for too long. I've got three interns who work for free because they want to stay busy until a job opens up for them. That's the market we're living in. I know that I don't want to hear, " I 'll do this but not that, " and I'm sure the recruiters don't want to hear it either.

There are a lot of scam postings across the board, but mostly that's because the companies are being dishonest with the recruiting firms. When I complained about two such listings with Cybercoders, they were removed within days. This was several years ago, but I've been helping my girlfriend build her resume lately and so I've been back on the listings. My advice is to register with as many free job sites as possible until you find something you can live with, then listen to your colleagues about what's opening up elsewhere. If you have specialized training, you will be valuable as long as you are currently employed. A lateral pass is far easier than a hail mary.

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RichCh.
Wesley Chapel, US
Jul 27, 2011 1:32 am EDT

I have applied for several for several positions for which I have been highly qualified in terms of experience and education. My references are impeccable. Yet...I spend up to an hour for each application (I only apply for positions that would be considered a "sideways" move from my current job) only to be constantly sent automated e-mails claiming that I am "not what we [the company] is looking for". My time has been wasted, and I do not plan to continue applying through this agency. These people are clearly unscrupulous bottom-feeders during a desperate era in this country.

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outrightpissed
Alhambra, US
Jun 23, 2011 10:14 pm EDT

After reading all the complaints I have to agree. My experience cost me time and money and not even a follow up call. I was called by one of their recruiters about a controller position after several weeks went by she calls me and said that I have an interview. Great! A day later I drove about 25 miles for the interview, the interview lasted about and hour and a half. I truly thought I had the position since it was a great fit and the rule usually is any interview longer than an hour is a home run. After leaving the interview I had to pay $25 in parking for which I was not told about and had to find a ATM to get cash. OK! Then I called the recruiter and advied her about the interview and she advised me to write up a nice letter and send it to her so that she could send it to her client. So, I did, I usually would do so but she wanted me to send it to her first and after that I never her back from her regarding the position. I did call her using Google Voice and she answered but refused to discuss the position. Not even a F’n thank you for going out to the interview. Or I’m sorry for not telling you about the parking situation. If you come across an Erin Beagle @ Cybercoders please “Stay Away”. Very unprofessional needs to learn how to communicate clearly to her “inventory” yes that is what we our in their minds and I bet that even if she does read this she won’t care. And yes a lot of positions posted on many job boards are fake ads.

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buyer18
La, US
May 31, 2011 7:16 pm EDT
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I saw a job posting that fit my background and applied on the website. Of Course I never got a response from someone. I ended up calling corporate and giving them all the info on listing on their site to see who I could speak with about the position they were trying to fill.

Within a couple days of posting for this job it was taken down off of cybercoders.com. I ended up speaking to someone (recruiter ? ) and was told they were't filling position for the company anymore. This recruiter did tell me the company but, had zero interest in my resume or seeing if I was a good fit for anything else in cybercoders listing.

To make a long story short I have a close friend that works in HR at the company cybercoders said they were filling positions for. My friend specifically told me they have NEVER worked with cybercoders and the posting was complete B.S! I managed to get my resume into HR directly...

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seoperson.net
valley village, US
May 17, 2011 3:52 am EDT
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Same thing is happening to me. I applied to many Cybercoders ads and not once I got an interview out of it even though the job is a perfect fit for me. Going to Careerbuilder most of the great sounding technical ads are Cybercoders. I dont even apply any more, just waste of time. Interestingly I get 90% of my job interviews from Craigslist. That is the best for job search. http://seoperson.net

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Be_Good
, US
Apr 12, 2011 4:35 pm EDT

What I find they have long list of details to be submitted which is mostly taking lot of time. Then finally nothing comes out ...really stupid...

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Mr. CG
Los Angeles, US
Apr 06, 2011 9:57 pm EDT

I too signed up for CyberCoders, they have never responded to any of my inquiries. I setup a spam box email address specifically for them and found that they are selling your details to companies for advertisement. I get tons of spam messages trying to sell me services to these accounts.

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RonD.
, US
Mar 23, 2011 5:42 pm EDT

Amazing. And al this time I thought it was just me. I've been applying to CyberCoder listings for several years, specifically to jobs with requirements I match perfectly. I've even received direct emails from CyberCoder recruiters about jobs they thought I was perfect for. Not once NOT ONCE - did they EVER return my email or phone call. Personally, I believe they are just gathering resumes and data. I have nothing good to say about them and express my opinion of them whenever I get the chance. Companies like this should be shunned.

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Spamtastic
Los Angeles, US
Dec 16, 2010 10:04 pm EST
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Let's be honest... ALL technical recruiters are a$$holes. They just want their 10% commission and could care less if you actually FIT the job they are trying to place you in. Their job is to get as many job seekers in and out of their office as fast as possible. Once they learn you are a "difficult" candidate (meaning you won't take the FIRST job offer you get), they stop calling you. Cybercoders is just as bad as any other firm I've dealt with. I've had their recruiters send me to jobs that required Framework coding experience, which I've NEVER done. When I asked the recruiter about it, she said she figured I could "fake it" until I "make it" on the job. I've had other recruiters give me an incorrect street address and suite number for an interview, and when I showed up 15 minutes late because I was originally in the WRONG BUILDING, the recruiter blamed me. CyberCoders will call me and if I don't pick-up, they'll call me right back, sometimes three calls in a row. It sucks that so many companies use these blood-sucking greedy jerks, but recruiters are the only option sometimes.

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ScottWillOC
, US
Dec 06, 2010 11:54 pm EST

Cybercodes are scammers. They jobs do not really exist.

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briget40
Chatsworth, US
Nov 10, 2010 7:08 am EST

I am a staff manager for a high tech company in California, I would never ever require the services of Cybercoders again, they overcharged us too much, all the so-called tech staff they sent us were mostly illegal immigrants from India without any real talents of skills, it was a real disappointment.

I was shocked by the candidates they sent us given that they require many years of experience and college degree in their posts, but when it comes to see the end results, the candidates they all sent us were giving poor performance, incapable of finishing any job.

We wasted a huge sum of money by requesting the services of Cybercoders.com.

I would strongly advise any other high tech company staffing manager to never request the services of Cybercoders as they are highly skilled scam artists.

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UCLA_Bruin_Master_Engineer
Hollywood, US
Oct 23, 2010 6:50 am EDT

I have dealt with Cybercoders many times, I can testify that this company is an absolute scam business that should be reported for abusive fraud to the US department of labor for embezzlement.

Cybercoder jobs don't exists, if they exist they overcharge their customers many times more and want the engineers to work at minimum wage if possible. So they would dry out all your energy and waste your efforts.

Which company is stupid enough to pay twice more than is required ? A normal engineering job is about $40/hour but with Cybercoders contracting, it becomes $90-$100/hour !

And which candidate is stupid enough to work for a company that under-estimate your qualifications, years of college and diploma ?

Even Bill Gates, Steve Jobs or Mark Zukerberg would not be up to the demands in qualification or experience demanded by those those low ### ### from Cybercoders.

Plus they turn away the good candidates, because the best candidates don't want to work for peanuts in dead end careers.

My advice is turn away from Cybercoders and ignore their spam postings.

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Mike8814
San Diego, US
Aug 10, 2010 4:36 pm EDT

I agree, I have been a Software Engineer for 13 years and these ### have been around for about the last 5 or so... in that time I have "applied" to a few of their positions for which I was a perfect fit and never heard back.

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