Ask HN: Is there a recruiter email blocklist somewhere?
Sometimes I get cold email from recruiters. These are uniformly useless. I don't mind too much, except for the ones who make a point of following up four times on the same day of the week.
I found a few old gists poking around but is there something like the hosts.txt files used for ad blocking?
68 comments
[ 6.2 ms ] story [ 134 ms ] threadI've played with the idea of building a managed incoming email gateway SaaS (Codename Project S.H.I.E.L.D) where you can just exclude whole cohorts of unwanted inbounds (recruiting, offshoring, monetization, linkbuilding) powered by Machine Learning, but I'm too busy to build it any time soon.
If someone's in and wants plans from my drawer, I'll be a paying first customer ;-)
I like to ask what the companies working in the nude policy is.
Employers do that? I've never once had an employer or potential employer ask me for my LinkedIn account.
It seems somehow they retrieved physical emails back in the day, before everyone removed their mails from LI. Now they're hitting mail directly but somehow still aware of your current LI profile.
I assume they have an aggregated DB connecting everyone's socials together with physical mails which they share or even sell to each other?
Make an Information Request asking how they got your personal information (email + job details) and under what legal basis they collected it.
When they inevitably reply with either LinkedIn, your work website, or some data broker make a complaint that:
1. They did not get consent from you
2. They did not inform you of the collection of your data without consent in a timely manner (through purchasing or direct collection). [Right to be informed]
3. That they are in breach of the "lawfulness" requirement of GDPR as they collected your personal information in breach of the terms/conditions of the source website (LinkedIn does not allow scraping).
When they deny all this and make some excuse about public information (which doesn't really exist), make a complaint to your local information commissioner.
If they gave a data broker, repeat the process again with them. They will remove you and pass this notification down to any other customers.
Within 6/12 months you'll be out of all the marketing lists.
Either way, they usually tell you they put you on their lists because of 'legitimate interest' which is daft but there we are.
In the UK, an enormous amount of jobs goes through recruiters. Even if you did not get your current job from recruiters, it's quite likely that some your coworkers did.
The kind of recruiters who send bulk spam emails don't seem to be the kind of recruiter that have exclusive contracts anyway, so no loss.
The weird thing is that inside the EU, supposedly GDPR protects against being automatically enlisted to email subscriptions or receiving repeated emails about the same topic without your authorization (and expires every 3 years).
Fly-by-night companies often simply don't care.
Subtract the LinkedIn spam and there is nothing there. There's nothing to be jealous of.
This. People complain about getting micro-harassed by recruiters when others are desperate for a job and would actually enjoy being head-hunted.
Sweet jeez how low of an EQ you would need to possess to be annoyed by this kind of things?
Just delete and move on.
Are you gonna ask for a viagra seller blocklist next?
Recruiter spam is for now not nearly as bad as this - but with enough automation, it could be too. So "just delete it" is not a solution that scales. Maybe spam filters would catch it too, but then you'd risk missing authentic offers...
Regarding the question: I don’t get many mails from recruiters. I wouldn’t invest time in setting up a block mechanism.
I think this is the most practical answer.
I get a fair number recruiter emails. The unsolicited mass messaging can be a little irking for sure, but with Gmail's hot keys, it takes ~0.1s to move an email to a special "recruiting" folder. Despite a high level of messages, I don't spend more than ten seconds on this a week, and have stopped stressing about it.
It shuts most of them down effectively, but also keeps the door open in case they really would have an opportunity that would work for me. And over the course of a decade or two working in the same town, it built a network that I can call up when I do want work, letting me drive the process on my next search.
2) Cold emails which obviously were sent to thousands with a canned message or a pitch completely foreign to your competence. Don't reply to those, you'll only get more of them and your connection to those recruiters won't have much future value either.
I get probably a dozen emails in bin 2, for every email in bin 1. Most of the bin 2 emails right now are from a company called "Data Revolution" which seems based in the UK and that I can only assume is either completely automated recruiter spam (Their profile pictures seem oddly stock-photoish), or some sort of dystopian gig-economy recruitment firm for people who rather send emails than drive Ubers.
The bin 1 contacts have actually returned on several occasions with those really rare job profiles I describe in my response, so this does work very well. I basically have a dozen people looking at job ads for me so I don't miss those one-in-a-thousand jobs I'm looking for.
I find it counter-productive to foster bad relationships with recruiters, although many of them have treated me most barbarously (I'm over 40, which means that I'm "radioactive").
LinkedIn sells a fairly pernicious type of spam, which allows recruiters to craft messages that seem to be quite personal. I have made the mistake of responding to these, in the past, as if they were personal. No harm in that, but I really waste my time, and the recruiters'.
But the worst kind are the recruiters based in India - they keep sending irrelevant emails for jobs in the US where I don't even live, and no matter how many times I flag them as spam in Gmail they keep going through. I think they found a loophole to go around Gmail spam filter, so the only way is to manually add them to a filter.
Just out of curiosity, especially in UK there seem to be companies that scrape CVs from job web sites, feed all the addresses into databases, and send these indiscriminate emails if a few keywords match. And if one responds, they ask for a telephone call and might call dozens of times.
At some point, I was actually wondering whether it would be possible to automatically get phone numbers of that kind of people into said CV data bases (with an obviously useless auto-generated CV that however has matching keywords).
I have been polite in saying no and lately I have been asking them to either remove me or put in a 3 year hold. They always say they will but then a week or 2 later I get another Amazon recruiter who was impressed with my resume.
Do you know if Amazon has a decentralized recruiting system or are they just disrespecting my wish?
I find it a bit annoying because Amazon is one of the companies that I would never willingly work for.
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