Clients looking for expert translators always run the risk of stumbling into a scam. There are many fake translators who apply for translation work across the Internet and who promote their fake skills and qualifications by using profiles that they have stolen from real translators with just some of the details (like the email contacts) changed.
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It’s difficult to eradicate the problem completely, but that doesn’t mean that there’s nothing real translators and clients looking for qualified, experienced translators can do to reduce the risks and alert others in the industry to the problem.
1. Keep up-to-date
The most important thing translators and clients looking for translators can do to avoid being scammed by scammers is to keep up-to-date with the different kinds of industry scams that they might fall prey to. One of the best ways of keeping up-to-date is to follow as many creditable translation blogs as possible.
Translation industry bloggers will always be amongst some of the first to highlight new translation scams to be aware of. The more contact clients and translators have with these blogs, the more difficult it becomes for scammers to continue tricking potential clients into paying for poor quality or non-existent translations.
2. Learn to recognize a typical scammer’s profile
Read up on the kind of profiles that scammers tend to assume. Find out as much information about the style of profile translation scammers adopt and revise these aspects of any application from interested translators that you receive before agreeing to send any work their way.
For example, most fake translators tend to operate using regular Hotmail or Gmail email accounts which they include on their fake CVs. An experienced, qualified and established translator is more likely to have an email account linked to a personal website or blog which he or she manages. The personal details of the real translator will always appear that much more professional. References will check out and they will be happy to contact you via Skype or other methods of online communication before committing to a translation project. They will also be able to provide lots of links to past translations and be happy to send you a test translated paragraph as part of the interview process.
3. Report scammers immediately
Reporting scammers is incredibly important. Even publishing a short post on the Internet, or making a reference to a bad experience with a fake translator via social media platforms, will help to control the problems which exist within the industry and reduce the power that translation scammers seem to have acquired.
In our last post, we describe in more detail how the scammers manage to get away with their crimes.
If more industry experts began publishing information, the translation industry would grow stronger against potential scammers and professionals working within the field could begin to stop worrying about identity fraud.