I always thought rep would become more of a commodity than simply 'unicorn points' ever since the time I applied for a job and they remarked about the score that I had on the site. This was long before I worked for Stack Exchange, I was doing mostly freelance consulting work and it amazed me that employers were more interested in my Stack Overflow profile itself, rather than my Careers 2.0 profile - it was as if Careers was a means to an end for folks not directly using it to hire.
Employers do look for participation on Stack Overflow now. If they're going by your reputation score alone during the interview - ask to go to the restroom and then climb out the window, run like hell and never look back. If they're not looking at your actual answers, and how well you can convey knowledge, then they might as well be counting your Facebook friends instead. That's not to say that hitting 10k, 20k, 50k or even 250k isn't a remarkable achievement, but the rep is just evidence of that achievement, not the achievement itself.
It makes me a little sad that someone would be paying someone to build up a profile for them. I suppose they could be doing it for a number of reasons, maybe they're just really intimidated by the site, maybe they're in a hurry, maybe they're just lazy. The point is, and yes I have one, they're missing the entire point - if you can't defend things you wrote in answers in an interview, you're not going to get hired.
Yes, it's definitely frowned upon, but not just because it not only skirts legalities as well as (possibly) our own terms of service. We have some pretty clear requirements (section 3, subscriber content):
Subscriber represents, warrants and agrees that it will not contribute any Subscriber Content that (a) infringes, violates or otherwise interferes with any copyright or trademark of another party, (b) reveals any trade secret, unless Subscriber owns the trade secret or has the owner’s permission to post it, (c) infringes any intellectual property right of another or the privacy or publicity rights of another, (d) is libelous, defamatory, abusive, threatening, harassing, hateful, offensive or otherwise violates any law or right of any third party, (e) contains a virus, trojan horse, worm, time bomb or other computer programming routine or engine that is intended to damage, detrimentally interfere with, surreptitiously intercept or expropriate any system, data or information, or (f) remains posted after Subscriber has been notified that such Subscriber Content violates any of sections (a) to (e) of this sentence.
Allowing a third party to post on your behalf doesn't automatically transfer this responsibility to them, because it's not their account - hence, if discovered, we'd at the least need to have a chat with the person responsible.
And, there's this, in section 1:
Subject to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, Stack Exchange may offer to provide the Services, as described more fully on the Network, and which are selected by Subscriber, solely for Subscriber’s own use, and not for the use or benefit of any third party.
But that's still not it - you're cheating yourself out of being the communicator you're willing to pay for, and that's the real travesty.
Now, for any of this to come to a head and really begin to suck, we'd have to discover it. If the person he pays ever comes back to contest ownership of the posts, well, we've got a big problem then. If (even more likely) the person you hired just copied content from other sites, and it was determined that you paid them to do this, we'd ask you to leave the site. I can't imagine many scenarios where this goes well.
So, put simply:
Paying people to pretend they're you on our sites is probably going to have the opposite of the desired effect, we're probably going to suspend you for a very long time, at the least.
That shiny profile you just payed $1500 to polish? Yeah, it's not so shiny when there's a big fat notice of being suspended for rule violations on the top of it.
Officially, we do not recommend this practice.