Can you lie about your address?

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Can you lie about your address?

Address fraud is a type of fraud in which the perpetrator uses an inaccurate or fictitious address to steal money or other benefit, or to hide from authorities. The crime may involve stating one’s address as a place where s/he never lived, or continuing to use a previous address where one no longer lives as one’s own.

Do background checks show if you were fired?

Termination from a previous job is unlikely to show up on a routine background check, but there are instances that might come to light. If you disclose that you were, in fact, terminated from a previous job, you will probably be asked to explain the circumstances about your firing.

Does everyone lie on their resume?

78% of job seekers lie during the hiring process—here’s what happened to 4 of them. Applying for a new job can be stressful, and according to one new survey, that stress is leading a majority of job seekers to lie on their resumes in order to stand out.20

Do colleges check your Internet history?

Nope. Colleges have no sound legal way of accessing your search history, nor would they go out of their way to look at it. Admissions are based on grades, accomplishments, that sort of thing–search history has nothing to do with college admissions.6

Can school WiFi see your texts?

If you have connected to school’s WiFi, there is not even a single chance that the school takes away your text messages from you, unless the WiFi itself has been hacked by someone other than your school. To monitor you guys, school wouldn’t take that risk at all.

Can schools see your deleted history?

The answer to the second question is a resounding NO. Even when you delete your browsing history, your network administrator can still access it and see what sites you’ve been visiting and how long you spent on a specific webpage.

Do colleges look at your TikTok?

Interestingly, the majority of students—70 percent—think it’s OK for college admissions officers to check them out on TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook. But only 59 percent of admissions personnel say that those sites are fair game, according to the survey.13

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