Some companies do donation-matching, so if an employee donates $X to a charity then the company will also donate $X. The scammer is pretending “I don’t work for such a company, but I’d like to double my donation, so I’d like to send money to you and you donate it and then your company also donates”.
Isn’t that fraud? That is, if you work for a company that matches donations, and I ask to give you money for you to give to MIRI, aren’t I asking you to defraud your company?
There are a lot of frauds that built on the idea that the recipiant of the fraud also engages in an illegal action. If the victim of fraud himself thinks he acted illegally it’s less likely that they will go to the authorities.
That’s why we have the saying “You can’t cheat an honest man”.
Correct, but it is a kind of fraud that is hard to detect and easy to justify to oneself as being “for the greater good” so the scammer is hoping that you won’t care.
Some companies do donation-matching, so if an employee donates $X to a charity then the company will also donate $X. The scammer is pretending “I don’t work for such a company, but I’d like to double my donation, so I’d like to send money to you and you donate it and then your company also donates”.
Isn’t that fraud? That is, if you work for a company that matches donations, and I ask to give you money for you to give to MIRI, aren’t I asking you to defraud your company?
There are a lot of frauds that built on the idea that the recipiant of the fraud also engages in an illegal action. If the victim of fraud himself thinks he acted illegally it’s less likely that they will go to the authorities.
That’s why we have the saying “You can’t cheat an honest man”.
Correct, but it is a kind of fraud that is hard to detect and easy to justify to oneself as being “for the greater good” so the scammer is hoping that you won’t care.