Over the past couple of years, I've seen the same job posted numerous times with the same description. The position is described as remote with competitive salary and benefits along with the perks of endless supply of sodas and a free lunch program. I've applied to several times, but I never got a response.
Recently, I applied to it again and I received a phone response from a person who asked me why I was looking for a job and described how great it is to work for them. It sounded like she was reading a script. She told me the hiring process requires completing a test project first before moving forward. She said there was no time limit on it and she would send me the files and instructions.
Within a few minutes after ending the call, I received a zipped up project along with requirements. The project is to design and implement a fairly complete server and client to perform a non-trivial set of file handling operations without the use of outside libraries and must compile in Visual Studio 2017. Normally, a coding test is small, has a well established runtime infrastructure and a testing harness. This one only includes a simple Visual Studio generated code from one of the stock project templates and a vague PDF project instructions.
I suspect the test project is really an attempt to get free development work. While I can't prove my suspicion, the fact that this organization has posted the same job repeatedly over the past two years would lead anyone to form such a conclusion. I would hate to see someone else have their labor stolen because they trusted a job posting on Stack Overflow, a highly regarded site many developers trust.
What actions can we as SO Careers users take when we suspect a job posting is being abused to exploit the good will of job applicants?