I can attest to the fact that many of these jobs are, in fact, legit; at a minimum, I can attest to the fact that my company's postings here are actual positions that we're hiring for (since I have admin access to the applicant tracking system).
That being said, I may be shooting myself in the foot here, but job boards in general are not the most efficient way of getting a job. My company hires far less than 1% of people who apply that way.
I recall a test job that we posted to a job board in the early days of rolling out the system; it clearly stated in numerous places in bold letters that it was test job and people shouldn't apply. Of course, we still got dozens of applications to it in the short time that it was posted publicly (which we then had to figure out what to do with). My point in telling that story is that job boards frequently attract a large number of variably-qualified candidates (in this case, it was obvious that none of the applicants had even read the job description; they probably just used the job board's "Quick Apply" feature because the job title seemed vaguely related). (Some people, myself included, openly questioned at various points whether job boards were even worth bothering with in the first place).
In terms of getting a job, there was one study that suggested that recruiters scan resumes for the contact information, job titles, and education when they're looking at a resume for the first time. That being said, if you're weak in those areas, you may want to try to enhance your resume by getting an internship, attending some kind of additional training program, getting additional education, or getting some kind of certification, otherwise it'll be hard for you to get past the initial resume screen by recruiters regardless of how you apply for jobs.
Also, Stack Overflow reputation will generally not get you a job. I will freely admit to including a link to my Stack Overflow profile on my resume, but I can only recall one case where someone actually looked it up, and I didn't end up getting that particular job.