DataArt Fraud Awareness

How to Verify Communications From DataArt

If you received a message claiming to be from DataArt and want to verify it, this page explains how we communicate and what to watch for.

Fraudsters may misuse DataArt’s name, logo, employee names, or job titles to make fake messages look legitimate. These scams may involve fake job postings, fake interviews, fraudulent emails, fake social media profiles, or requests for money or personal information.

If you are unsure whether a message is really from DataArt, do not respond, click links, download files, send money, or share personal information until you verify it through an official DataArt channel.

DataArt never asks you to

DataArt will never ask candidates, clients, partners, or members of the public to:

  • Pay money or make purchases to apply for a job, attend an interview, receive an offer, start onboarding, obtain equipment, complete training, buy software, gift cards, cryptocurrency, vouchers, laptops, phones, or other items.
  • Send money to anyone claiming to be a DataArt recruiter, employee, manager, agent, finance representative, or third party.
  • Share credentials or security codes, including passwords, one-time passcodes, MFA codes, recovery codes, banking credentials, crypto wallet details, or private keys.
  • Install remote access tools or unknown applications, browser extensions, or mobile apps to continue a recruitment or business conversation.
  • Complete a hiring process only through unofficial channels, such as Telegram, WhatsApp, Signal, SMS, personal email, or social media messaging.
  • Accept a job offer without a reasonable interview process or provide sensitive identity, tax, or banking documents before a legitimate offer and official onboarding process.
  • Keep communication secret, ignore verification steps, or act urgently because an opportunity will “expire immediately.”

What legitimate DataArt communication looks like

For recruitment, DataArt follows a structured process that may include CV review, HR communication, interviews, communication skills evaluation, technical or professional assessment, project discussion, and a formal offer.

Legitimate DataArt communication should be professional, transparent, and verifiable. You should be able to confirm the vacancy, the person contacting you, and the next steps through official DataArt resources.

In general:

Check

Expected legitimate behavior

Website

Jobs and company information should be verifiable through official DataArt websites.

Email

Official communication should not rely on lookalike domains, misspellings, or free personal email services.

Recruiter identity

The person contacting you should be verifiable through official channels.

Process

A legitimate hiring process includes reasonable interviews and assessments, not an instant offer after a short chat.

Money

DataArt does not ask candidates or members of the public to pay fees or transfer money.

Documents

Sensitive documents are requested only through appropriate official onboarding or contracting processes.

Links and files

Links and attachments should be expected, relevant, and connected to official or clearly verifiable systems.

Pressure

Urgency, secrecy, threats, or emotional pressure are warning signs.

Important: logos, email display names, LinkedIn profiles, caller IDs, and screenshots can be faked. Treat them as signals, not proof.

Warning signs of a scam

A message may be fraudulent if it:

  • Comes from a suspicious, misspelled, or lookalike domain, or from a free personal email account.
  • Offers a job you did not apply for, moves unusually fast, or promises unusually high pay for vague responsibilities.
  • Requests money, purchases, banking details, identity documents, credentials, or verification codes.
  • Sends links to unfamiliar forms, file-sharing services, login pages, downloads, or asks you to install software.
  • Uses poor grammar, inconsistent formatting, copied branding, or generic job descriptions.
  • Claims to represent DataArt but refuses verification through official channels.

What to do if you receive a suspicious message

  1. Stop communication until you verify it.
  2. Do not click links, open attachments, send money, or share personal information.
  3. Check the sender, domain, links, and job posting carefully.
  4. Verify the opportunity through DataArt’s official careers website: https://www.dataart.team/vacancies.
  5. Contact DataArt through an official channel: [insert reporting form].
  6. Preserve evidence: screenshots, sender addresses, phone numbers, profile URLs, links, payment requests, and email headers if available.
  7. Report the fake profile, job post, email, domain, or message to the platform where it appeared.

If you already sent money or sensitive information, contact your bank or payment provider immediately, change affected passwords, enable multi-factor authentication, monitor your accounts, and report the incident to local authorities where appropriate.

Report to DataArt

Please include:

  • Screenshot or copy of the suspicious message, profile, website, job posting, or email.
  • Sender email address, phone number, profile URL, messaging app username, or website URL.
  • Date and time of contact.
  • Any payment request, invoice, bank details, crypto wallet address, attachment, or link received.
  • Whether you clicked a link, downloaded a file, sent money, or shared personal information.

DataArt may not be able to respond to every report individually, but reports help us investigate abuse, request takedowns, warn affected people, and improve public guidance.

Official DataArt resources

Use official DataArt resources to verify information:

Only trust links that you type yourself or access from the official DataArt website. Do not rely on links sent in suspicious messages.