Is this apparent Class Action settlement a spam message?Is This A Scam? Woman added me on LinkedIn first, then e-mailed offering me millions of dollarsWhat's this “collections” scam?Is this Paypal request a potential scamAm I right to believe this online car-purchase opportunity is a scam?Funds deposited in my bank account. Account closed for suspicious activity. Is this a scam?How can this iPhone scam be economically viable?A newer friend of my brother's gave him a load of baseball cards that are supposedly extremely valuable. Is this a scam?Is this app buyout company a scam?Guy I met online has posted me money, is this illegal?Is this claim fraudulent: “I Can't Believe This $16,728 Social Security Bonus Was So Easy”?

If someone else uploads my GPL'd code to Github without my permission, is that a copyright violation?

A verb for when some rights are not violated?

Generate a random point outside a given rectangle within a map

How easy is it to get a gun illegally in the United States?

Why do dragons like shiny stuff?

Can chords be inferred from melody alone?

Can I enter Switzerland with only my London Driver's License?

How to realistically deal with a shield user?

Is it double speak?

How do I get the =LEFT function in excel, to also take the number zero as the first number?

What does the ISO setting for mechanical 35mm film cameras actually do?

Find a text string in a file and output only the rest of the text that follows it?

What prevents ads from reading my password as I type it?

Getting an entry level IT position later in life

Why is Chromosome 1 called Chromosome 1?

The meaning of "scale" in "because diversions scale so easily wealth becomes concentrated"

Make a living as a math programming freelancer?

How to approach protecting my code as a research assistant? Should I be worried in the first place?

Can attackers change the public key of certificate during the SSL handshake

Does the length of a password for Wi-Fi affect speed?

Purchased new computer from DELL with pre-installed Ubuntu. Won't boot. Should assume its an error from DELL?

Can you take actions after being healed at 0hp?

Is there a way to improve my grade after graduation?

Whats the difference between <processors> and <pipelines> in Sitecore configuration?



Is this apparent Class Action settlement a spam message?


Is This A Scam? Woman added me on LinkedIn first, then e-mailed offering me millions of dollarsWhat's this “collections” scam?Is this Paypal request a potential scamAm I right to believe this online car-purchase opportunity is a scam?Funds deposited in my bank account. Account closed for suspicious activity. Is this a scam?How can this iPhone scam be economically viable?A newer friend of my brother's gave him a load of baseball cards that are supposedly extremely valuable. Is this a scam?Is this app buyout company a scam?Guy I met online has posted me money, is this illegal?Is this claim fraudulent: “I Can't Believe This $16,728 Social Security Bonus Was So Easy”?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








22















I got the following email:




CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT NOTICE



LEGAL NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE
COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA



Douglas v. DHI Group, Inc. et al.; Case No. 18-cv-331732



You are receiving this Notice because you have been identified as a
Class Member who will be entitled to a settlement payment if a
settlement is finally approved unless you timely exclude yourself. To
file a Claim Form, click here.



The parties estimate you will receive up to $500 if you file a claim.
However, the final amount you will receive depends on the number of
claims filed. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This proposed settlement covers people about whom DHI Group, Inc. and
Dice Inc. (together, “Dice”) created an Open Web profile since July
26, 2012, and with whom a third party sought to communicate using
Dice’s software, as well as those people who requested a copy of their
Open Web profile from Dice.



A state court authorized this Notice. This is not a solicitation from
a lawyer. Read this notice carefully, as it affects your rights.



For more information, visit www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call
1-855-598-4037.



WHAT IS THIS CASE ABOUT? The individual who brought the lawsuit
(called the Plaintiff) claims that DHI Group, Inc. and Dice Inc.
(together, “Dice”) violated a statute applicable to consumer reporting
agencies called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”). Specifically,
he alleges that Dice was a “consumer reporting agency” preparing
“consumer reports” under the FCRA when it gathered information from
various online sources regarding job seekers and then compiled that
information into “candidate profiles” for sale to potential employers
and recruiters, and that Dice violated the FCRA in several other ways
by not treating the profiles as “consumer reports.”



Dice denies that it is a “consumer reporting agency” under the FCRA
and that candidate profiles are “consumer reports.” Dice maintains
that it did not do anything wrong and that the FCRA does not apply to
Dice or its activities.



WHO IS INCLUDED? If your name is located on the top of this Notice,
you are a Class Member and are part of the Settlement, unless you
timely exclude yourself from it.



The precise definition of a Class Member can be found in the Long Form
Notice.



WHAT DOES THE SETTLEMENT PROVIDE? The parties estimate you will
receive up to $500 if you file a claim. However, the final amount will
depend on the number of claims filed, and could be substantially less
than $500. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This amount comes from a payment of $1 million by Dice to a fund from
which payments to Class Members, attorneys’ fees to Class Counsel, the
costs of the Settlement Administrator, and a service payment to the
Class Representative will be made. The final amount will depend on the
number of claims filed.



Class Counsel will ask the Court to award them attorneys’ fees in an
amount no greater than one-third of the Settlement Amount ($333,333)
plus reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The Court may award the
Plaintiff in this case a service award totaling up to $5,000 for the
time and effort he has put into this case on behalf of the Settlement
Class.



You will only receive a benefit if you file a Claim Form online by
June 24, 2019, or if mailed, postmarked no later than June 24, 2019.
The Settlement also provides that Dice will implement certain business
practice changes. For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com.



HOW DO I FILE A CLAIM? There are two ways to file a Claim Form: (1)
File online, at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com; or (2) Print a Claim Form,
available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, fill it out, and mail it
(with postage) to the address listed on the Claim Form. Printed Claim
Forms that do not contain a valid Notice ID (shown at the top of this
email) will not be processed. Claim Forms must be filed online or
postmarked by June 24, 2019.



YOUR OTHER OPTIONS. If you don’t want to receive a cash payment or
other settlement benefits and don’t want to be bound by the Settlement
and any judgment in this case, you must send a written request to
exclude yourself. You must either send your exclusion by mail or
submit a letter via the Settlement Website at
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, saying that you want to be excluded.
Exclusions must be submitted or postmarked no later than May 27, 2019.
If you exclude yourself, you will not receive benefits from the
Settlement. If you don’t exclude yourself, you will give up the right
to sue Dice about any of the issues related to this case. Please see
the Long Form Notice for additional details.



If you don’t exclude yourself, you may object to the Settlement or to
the request for fees and costs by Class Counsel.



The Long Form Notice, available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, further
explains how to exclude yourself or object.



The Court will hold a hearing in this case on August 2, 2019 at 9:00
a.m., to consider whether to approve: (1) the Settlement; (2)
attorneys’ fees and costs for Class Counsel; and (3) a service award
of $5,000 for the Class Representative in this case. You may appear at
the hearing, but you don’t have to. The Court has appointed attorneys
(called “Class Counsel”) to represent the Class Members. These
attorneys are listed in the Long Form Notice. You may hire your own
attorney to appear for you, but if you do so, it will be at your own
expense.



WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call 1-855-598-4037.



Please keep this Notice for your records. You may need the Notice ID
and Confirmation Code located on the top of this email in the future.
Please include your Notice ID on all correspondence with the
Settlement Administrator.




I am not sure if this is spam or not.



PS. Posted related question: Class Action - which options I have?










share|improve this question





















  • 6





    Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

    – Wesley Marshall
    Mar 27 at 2:31







  • 3





    @WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

    – Alexan
    Mar 27 at 3:13






  • 12





    Did you mean Scam or Spam?

    – Lawrence
    Mar 27 at 4:48






  • 1





    Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:56


















22















I got the following email:




CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT NOTICE



LEGAL NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE
COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA



Douglas v. DHI Group, Inc. et al.; Case No. 18-cv-331732



You are receiving this Notice because you have been identified as a
Class Member who will be entitled to a settlement payment if a
settlement is finally approved unless you timely exclude yourself. To
file a Claim Form, click here.



The parties estimate you will receive up to $500 if you file a claim.
However, the final amount you will receive depends on the number of
claims filed. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This proposed settlement covers people about whom DHI Group, Inc. and
Dice Inc. (together, “Dice”) created an Open Web profile since July
26, 2012, and with whom a third party sought to communicate using
Dice’s software, as well as those people who requested a copy of their
Open Web profile from Dice.



A state court authorized this Notice. This is not a solicitation from
a lawyer. Read this notice carefully, as it affects your rights.



For more information, visit www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call
1-855-598-4037.



WHAT IS THIS CASE ABOUT? The individual who brought the lawsuit
(called the Plaintiff) claims that DHI Group, Inc. and Dice Inc.
(together, “Dice”) violated a statute applicable to consumer reporting
agencies called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”). Specifically,
he alleges that Dice was a “consumer reporting agency” preparing
“consumer reports” under the FCRA when it gathered information from
various online sources regarding job seekers and then compiled that
information into “candidate profiles” for sale to potential employers
and recruiters, and that Dice violated the FCRA in several other ways
by not treating the profiles as “consumer reports.”



Dice denies that it is a “consumer reporting agency” under the FCRA
and that candidate profiles are “consumer reports.” Dice maintains
that it did not do anything wrong and that the FCRA does not apply to
Dice or its activities.



WHO IS INCLUDED? If your name is located on the top of this Notice,
you are a Class Member and are part of the Settlement, unless you
timely exclude yourself from it.



The precise definition of a Class Member can be found in the Long Form
Notice.



WHAT DOES THE SETTLEMENT PROVIDE? The parties estimate you will
receive up to $500 if you file a claim. However, the final amount will
depend on the number of claims filed, and could be substantially less
than $500. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This amount comes from a payment of $1 million by Dice to a fund from
which payments to Class Members, attorneys’ fees to Class Counsel, the
costs of the Settlement Administrator, and a service payment to the
Class Representative will be made. The final amount will depend on the
number of claims filed.



Class Counsel will ask the Court to award them attorneys’ fees in an
amount no greater than one-third of the Settlement Amount ($333,333)
plus reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The Court may award the
Plaintiff in this case a service award totaling up to $5,000 for the
time and effort he has put into this case on behalf of the Settlement
Class.



You will only receive a benefit if you file a Claim Form online by
June 24, 2019, or if mailed, postmarked no later than June 24, 2019.
The Settlement also provides that Dice will implement certain business
practice changes. For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com.



HOW DO I FILE A CLAIM? There are two ways to file a Claim Form: (1)
File online, at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com; or (2) Print a Claim Form,
available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, fill it out, and mail it
(with postage) to the address listed on the Claim Form. Printed Claim
Forms that do not contain a valid Notice ID (shown at the top of this
email) will not be processed. Claim Forms must be filed online or
postmarked by June 24, 2019.



YOUR OTHER OPTIONS. If you don’t want to receive a cash payment or
other settlement benefits and don’t want to be bound by the Settlement
and any judgment in this case, you must send a written request to
exclude yourself. You must either send your exclusion by mail or
submit a letter via the Settlement Website at
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, saying that you want to be excluded.
Exclusions must be submitted or postmarked no later than May 27, 2019.
If you exclude yourself, you will not receive benefits from the
Settlement. If you don’t exclude yourself, you will give up the right
to sue Dice about any of the issues related to this case. Please see
the Long Form Notice for additional details.



If you don’t exclude yourself, you may object to the Settlement or to
the request for fees and costs by Class Counsel.



The Long Form Notice, available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, further
explains how to exclude yourself or object.



The Court will hold a hearing in this case on August 2, 2019 at 9:00
a.m., to consider whether to approve: (1) the Settlement; (2)
attorneys’ fees and costs for Class Counsel; and (3) a service award
of $5,000 for the Class Representative in this case. You may appear at
the hearing, but you don’t have to. The Court has appointed attorneys
(called “Class Counsel”) to represent the Class Members. These
attorneys are listed in the Long Form Notice. You may hire your own
attorney to appear for you, but if you do so, it will be at your own
expense.



WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call 1-855-598-4037.



Please keep this Notice for your records. You may need the Notice ID
and Confirmation Code located on the top of this email in the future.
Please include your Notice ID on all correspondence with the
Settlement Administrator.




I am not sure if this is spam or not.



PS. Posted related question: Class Action - which options I have?










share|improve this question





















  • 6





    Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

    – Wesley Marshall
    Mar 27 at 2:31







  • 3





    @WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

    – Alexan
    Mar 27 at 3:13






  • 12





    Did you mean Scam or Spam?

    – Lawrence
    Mar 27 at 4:48






  • 1





    Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:56














22












22








22


1






I got the following email:




CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT NOTICE



LEGAL NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE
COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA



Douglas v. DHI Group, Inc. et al.; Case No. 18-cv-331732



You are receiving this Notice because you have been identified as a
Class Member who will be entitled to a settlement payment if a
settlement is finally approved unless you timely exclude yourself. To
file a Claim Form, click here.



The parties estimate you will receive up to $500 if you file a claim.
However, the final amount you will receive depends on the number of
claims filed. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This proposed settlement covers people about whom DHI Group, Inc. and
Dice Inc. (together, “Dice”) created an Open Web profile since July
26, 2012, and with whom a third party sought to communicate using
Dice’s software, as well as those people who requested a copy of their
Open Web profile from Dice.



A state court authorized this Notice. This is not a solicitation from
a lawyer. Read this notice carefully, as it affects your rights.



For more information, visit www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call
1-855-598-4037.



WHAT IS THIS CASE ABOUT? The individual who brought the lawsuit
(called the Plaintiff) claims that DHI Group, Inc. and Dice Inc.
(together, “Dice”) violated a statute applicable to consumer reporting
agencies called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”). Specifically,
he alleges that Dice was a “consumer reporting agency” preparing
“consumer reports” under the FCRA when it gathered information from
various online sources regarding job seekers and then compiled that
information into “candidate profiles” for sale to potential employers
and recruiters, and that Dice violated the FCRA in several other ways
by not treating the profiles as “consumer reports.”



Dice denies that it is a “consumer reporting agency” under the FCRA
and that candidate profiles are “consumer reports.” Dice maintains
that it did not do anything wrong and that the FCRA does not apply to
Dice or its activities.



WHO IS INCLUDED? If your name is located on the top of this Notice,
you are a Class Member and are part of the Settlement, unless you
timely exclude yourself from it.



The precise definition of a Class Member can be found in the Long Form
Notice.



WHAT DOES THE SETTLEMENT PROVIDE? The parties estimate you will
receive up to $500 if you file a claim. However, the final amount will
depend on the number of claims filed, and could be substantially less
than $500. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This amount comes from a payment of $1 million by Dice to a fund from
which payments to Class Members, attorneys’ fees to Class Counsel, the
costs of the Settlement Administrator, and a service payment to the
Class Representative will be made. The final amount will depend on the
number of claims filed.



Class Counsel will ask the Court to award them attorneys’ fees in an
amount no greater than one-third of the Settlement Amount ($333,333)
plus reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The Court may award the
Plaintiff in this case a service award totaling up to $5,000 for the
time and effort he has put into this case on behalf of the Settlement
Class.



You will only receive a benefit if you file a Claim Form online by
June 24, 2019, or if mailed, postmarked no later than June 24, 2019.
The Settlement also provides that Dice will implement certain business
practice changes. For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com.



HOW DO I FILE A CLAIM? There are two ways to file a Claim Form: (1)
File online, at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com; or (2) Print a Claim Form,
available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, fill it out, and mail it
(with postage) to the address listed on the Claim Form. Printed Claim
Forms that do not contain a valid Notice ID (shown at the top of this
email) will not be processed. Claim Forms must be filed online or
postmarked by June 24, 2019.



YOUR OTHER OPTIONS. If you don’t want to receive a cash payment or
other settlement benefits and don’t want to be bound by the Settlement
and any judgment in this case, you must send a written request to
exclude yourself. You must either send your exclusion by mail or
submit a letter via the Settlement Website at
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, saying that you want to be excluded.
Exclusions must be submitted or postmarked no later than May 27, 2019.
If you exclude yourself, you will not receive benefits from the
Settlement. If you don’t exclude yourself, you will give up the right
to sue Dice about any of the issues related to this case. Please see
the Long Form Notice for additional details.



If you don’t exclude yourself, you may object to the Settlement or to
the request for fees and costs by Class Counsel.



The Long Form Notice, available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, further
explains how to exclude yourself or object.



The Court will hold a hearing in this case on August 2, 2019 at 9:00
a.m., to consider whether to approve: (1) the Settlement; (2)
attorneys’ fees and costs for Class Counsel; and (3) a service award
of $5,000 for the Class Representative in this case. You may appear at
the hearing, but you don’t have to. The Court has appointed attorneys
(called “Class Counsel”) to represent the Class Members. These
attorneys are listed in the Long Form Notice. You may hire your own
attorney to appear for you, but if you do so, it will be at your own
expense.



WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call 1-855-598-4037.



Please keep this Notice for your records. You may need the Notice ID
and Confirmation Code located on the top of this email in the future.
Please include your Notice ID on all correspondence with the
Settlement Administrator.




I am not sure if this is spam or not.



PS. Posted related question: Class Action - which options I have?










share|improve this question
















I got the following email:




CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT NOTICE



LEGAL NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE
COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA



Douglas v. DHI Group, Inc. et al.; Case No. 18-cv-331732



You are receiving this Notice because you have been identified as a
Class Member who will be entitled to a settlement payment if a
settlement is finally approved unless you timely exclude yourself. To
file a Claim Form, click here.



The parties estimate you will receive up to $500 if you file a claim.
However, the final amount you will receive depends on the number of
claims filed. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This proposed settlement covers people about whom DHI Group, Inc. and
Dice Inc. (together, “Dice”) created an Open Web profile since July
26, 2012, and with whom a third party sought to communicate using
Dice’s software, as well as those people who requested a copy of their
Open Web profile from Dice.



A state court authorized this Notice. This is not a solicitation from
a lawyer. Read this notice carefully, as it affects your rights.



For more information, visit www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call
1-855-598-4037.



WHAT IS THIS CASE ABOUT? The individual who brought the lawsuit
(called the Plaintiff) claims that DHI Group, Inc. and Dice Inc.
(together, “Dice”) violated a statute applicable to consumer reporting
agencies called the Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”). Specifically,
he alleges that Dice was a “consumer reporting agency” preparing
“consumer reports” under the FCRA when it gathered information from
various online sources regarding job seekers and then compiled that
information into “candidate profiles” for sale to potential employers
and recruiters, and that Dice violated the FCRA in several other ways
by not treating the profiles as “consumer reports.”



Dice denies that it is a “consumer reporting agency” under the FCRA
and that candidate profiles are “consumer reports.” Dice maintains
that it did not do anything wrong and that the FCRA does not apply to
Dice or its activities.



WHO IS INCLUDED? If your name is located on the top of this Notice,
you are a Class Member and are part of the Settlement, unless you
timely exclude yourself from it.



The precise definition of a Class Member can be found in the Long Form
Notice.



WHAT DOES THE SETTLEMENT PROVIDE? The parties estimate you will
receive up to $500 if you file a claim. However, the final amount will
depend on the number of claims filed, and could be substantially less
than $500. Based on prior claims rates in other settlements, the
parties anticipate that payouts will be between $50-$200.



This amount comes from a payment of $1 million by Dice to a fund from
which payments to Class Members, attorneys’ fees to Class Counsel, the
costs of the Settlement Administrator, and a service payment to the
Class Representative will be made. The final amount will depend on the
number of claims filed.



Class Counsel will ask the Court to award them attorneys’ fees in an
amount no greater than one-third of the Settlement Amount ($333,333)
plus reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The Court may award the
Plaintiff in this case a service award totaling up to $5,000 for the
time and effort he has put into this case on behalf of the Settlement
Class.



You will only receive a benefit if you file a Claim Form online by
June 24, 2019, or if mailed, postmarked no later than June 24, 2019.
The Settlement also provides that Dice will implement certain business
practice changes. For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com.



HOW DO I FILE A CLAIM? There are two ways to file a Claim Form: (1)
File online, at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com; or (2) Print a Claim Form,
available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, fill it out, and mail it
(with postage) to the address listed on the Claim Form. Printed Claim
Forms that do not contain a valid Notice ID (shown at the top of this
email) will not be processed. Claim Forms must be filed online or
postmarked by June 24, 2019.



YOUR OTHER OPTIONS. If you don’t want to receive a cash payment or
other settlement benefits and don’t want to be bound by the Settlement
and any judgment in this case, you must send a written request to
exclude yourself. You must either send your exclusion by mail or
submit a letter via the Settlement Website at
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, saying that you want to be excluded.
Exclusions must be submitted or postmarked no later than May 27, 2019.
If you exclude yourself, you will not receive benefits from the
Settlement. If you don’t exclude yourself, you will give up the right
to sue Dice about any of the issues related to this case. Please see
the Long Form Notice for additional details.



If you don’t exclude yourself, you may object to the Settlement or to
the request for fees and costs by Class Counsel.



The Long Form Notice, available at www.DiceFCRASettlement.com, further
explains how to exclude yourself or object.



The Court will hold a hearing in this case on August 2, 2019 at 9:00
a.m., to consider whether to approve: (1) the Settlement; (2)
attorneys’ fees and costs for Class Counsel; and (3) a service award
of $5,000 for the Class Representative in this case. You may appear at
the hearing, but you don’t have to. The Court has appointed attorneys
(called “Class Counsel”) to represent the Class Members. These
attorneys are listed in the Long Form Notice. You may hire your own
attorney to appear for you, but if you do so, it will be at your own
expense.



WHERE CAN I GET MORE INFORMATION? For more information, visit
www.DiceFCRASettlement.com or call 1-855-598-4037.



Please keep this Notice for your records. You may need the Notice ID
and Confirmation Code located on the top of this email in the future.
Please include your Notice ID on all correspondence with the
Settlement Administrator.




I am not sure if this is spam or not.



PS. Posted related question: Class Action - which options I have?







scams






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 27 at 17:10







Alexan

















asked Mar 27 at 2:20









AlexanAlexan

4846 silver badges18 bronze badges




4846 silver badges18 bronze badges










  • 6





    Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

    – Wesley Marshall
    Mar 27 at 2:31







  • 3





    @WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

    – Alexan
    Mar 27 at 3:13






  • 12





    Did you mean Scam or Spam?

    – Lawrence
    Mar 27 at 4:48






  • 1





    Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:56













  • 6





    Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

    – Wesley Marshall
    Mar 27 at 2:31







  • 3





    @WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

    – Alexan
    Mar 27 at 3:13






  • 12





    Did you mean Scam or Spam?

    – Lawrence
    Mar 27 at 4:48






  • 1





    Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 27 at 16:06






  • 2





    Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:56








6




6





Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

– Wesley Marshall
Mar 27 at 2:31






Did you create and/or use an account on dice.com since 2012?

– Wesley Marshall
Mar 27 at 2:31





3




3





@WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

– Alexan
Mar 27 at 3:13





@WesleyMarshall, I remember I had account there several years ago.

– Alexan
Mar 27 at 3:13




12




12





Did you mean Scam or Spam?

– Lawrence
Mar 27 at 4:48





Did you mean Scam or Spam?

– Lawrence
Mar 27 at 4:48




1




1





Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

– Jan Doggen
Mar 27 at 16:06





Good question, because scam/spam like this exists.

– Jan Doggen
Mar 27 at 16:06




2




2





Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

– The Great Duck
Mar 28 at 1:56






Worth mentioning here. Never click links in an email. Even if you know who sent it, don't ever trust a link. Anyone attempting to verify those links should tread carefully as there is no way to know even whether the displayed URL matches the actual URL shown when you mouse over it. Even then, the email could have some code embedded somewhere that changes it to a different site when you click it (trust me I've seen this done with my own eyes). So please keep that in mind when verifying the links. This may or may not be a legit case, but the email could still be an impersonator.

– The Great Duck
Mar 28 at 1:56











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















33














It's legit...
this is DHI Group's 10-K from 2/7/2019.
Search for the case#: 331732



and I'm a member of the class as well ;)






share|improve this answer




















  • 45





    Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

    – Peter Mortensen
    Mar 27 at 8:55











  • @PeterMortensen Use google.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:40






  • 4





    So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:40












  • @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:43











  • The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:45



















24














This seems to be the case as listed by Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara.



I don't see anything there which specifies that particular website as the avenue for filing a claim but all of the other details seem to check out.



edit: to check this, I noted that the email said that there would be a hearing on 2nd August 2019. I went to the court's website and looked at the "Courtrooom Calendars" link. After selecting the correct date and type of case, I found the page for the case which I linked to above






share|improve this answer




























    protected by JoeTaxpayer Mar 27 at 15:15



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    33














    It's legit...
    this is DHI Group's 10-K from 2/7/2019.
    Search for the case#: 331732



    and I'm a member of the class as well ;)






    share|improve this answer




















    • 45





      Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

      – Peter Mortensen
      Mar 27 at 8:55











    • @PeterMortensen Use google.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:40






    • 4





      So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:40












    • @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:43











    • The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:45
















    33














    It's legit...
    this is DHI Group's 10-K from 2/7/2019.
    Search for the case#: 331732



    and I'm a member of the class as well ;)






    share|improve this answer




















    • 45





      Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

      – Peter Mortensen
      Mar 27 at 8:55











    • @PeterMortensen Use google.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:40






    • 4





      So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:40












    • @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:43











    • The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:45














    33












    33








    33







    It's legit...
    this is DHI Group's 10-K from 2/7/2019.
    Search for the case#: 331732



    and I'm a member of the class as well ;)






    share|improve this answer













    It's legit...
    this is DHI Group's 10-K from 2/7/2019.
    Search for the case#: 331732



    and I'm a member of the class as well ;)







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Mar 27 at 2:58









    K.H. BK.H. B

    3862 silver badges4 bronze badges




    3862 silver badges4 bronze badges










    • 45





      Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

      – Peter Mortensen
      Mar 27 at 8:55











    • @PeterMortensen Use google.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:40






    • 4





      So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:40












    • @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:43











    • The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:45













    • 45





      Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

      – Peter Mortensen
      Mar 27 at 8:55











    • @PeterMortensen Use google.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:40






    • 4





      So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:40












    • @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

      – The Great Duck
      Mar 28 at 1:43











    • The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

      – artem
      Mar 28 at 1:45








    45




    45





    Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

    – Peter Mortensen
    Mar 27 at 8:55





    Perhaps add something about how this was identified so this answer could be more broadly applied.

    – Peter Mortensen
    Mar 27 at 8:55













    @PeterMortensen Use google.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:40





    @PeterMortensen Use google.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:40




    4




    4





    So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:40






    So, how can one be sure that www.DiceFCRASettlement.com is not a legit-looking scammer site harvesting personal data?

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:40














    @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:43





    @artem How can you be certain that someone doesn't impersonate a lawyer involved in such a settlement to scam you? You honestly cannot without visiting the site, and you cannot visit the site without risks of viruses and malware. Perhaps it's best to not be concerned with the site being a scam and instead just find the contact information for the agency through other means (search engine) and contact them that way with forms they'll likely have on their site. Never click links in an email unless you request it. Even if your bank reports a breach and its legit go to the site to change password.

    – The Great Duck
    Mar 28 at 1:43













    The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:45






    The point is, there's no point in visiting the site to confirm if it's legit or not, you have to check other sources. If you want to confirm that someone is a lawyer and not an impersonator, you request references from other lawyers or look at court records. If you don't have lawyers that you trust - tough luck.

    – artem
    Mar 28 at 1:45














    24














    This seems to be the case as listed by Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara.



    I don't see anything there which specifies that particular website as the avenue for filing a claim but all of the other details seem to check out.



    edit: to check this, I noted that the email said that there would be a hearing on 2nd August 2019. I went to the court's website and looked at the "Courtrooom Calendars" link. After selecting the correct date and type of case, I found the page for the case which I linked to above






    share|improve this answer































      24














      This seems to be the case as listed by Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara.



      I don't see anything there which specifies that particular website as the avenue for filing a claim but all of the other details seem to check out.



      edit: to check this, I noted that the email said that there would be a hearing on 2nd August 2019. I went to the court's website and looked at the "Courtrooom Calendars" link. After selecting the correct date and type of case, I found the page for the case which I linked to above






      share|improve this answer





























        24












        24








        24







        This seems to be the case as listed by Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara.



        I don't see anything there which specifies that particular website as the avenue for filing a claim but all of the other details seem to check out.



        edit: to check this, I noted that the email said that there would be a hearing on 2nd August 2019. I went to the court's website and looked at the "Courtrooom Calendars" link. After selecting the correct date and type of case, I found the page for the case which I linked to above






        share|improve this answer















        This seems to be the case as listed by Superior Court of California, County of Santa Clara.



        I don't see anything there which specifies that particular website as the avenue for filing a claim but all of the other details seem to check out.



        edit: to check this, I noted that the email said that there would be a hearing on 2nd August 2019. I went to the court's website and looked at the "Courtrooom Calendars" link. After selecting the correct date and type of case, I found the page for the case which I linked to above







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 27 at 12:09

























        answered Mar 27 at 3:05









        barrowcbarrowc

        3311 silver badge6 bronze badges




        3311 silver badge6 bronze badges


















            protected by JoeTaxpayer Mar 27 at 15:15



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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