How does he get access? By signing up for access the same way you did. While headhunters and such are discouraged from making si-list their own personal hunting ground, it certainly isn't all that difficult for them to exploit the list for their own purposes. -Ray Anderson (si-list admin) winbery@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >How could the headhunter like this one get access to this list? I don not >think the need is immediate. >It is interesting to note that this same position has been placed into this >list multiple times since >the middle of last year. Also, interestingly, the same position also posted on >same job website from >multiple recruiters with different job id. The hiring manager must be playing >with the recruiters and >candidate snippet of the of the subject post: > > >>Hello all, >>We have a very urgent need for the following: >> >>SIGNAL INTEGRITY ENGINEER >>Principal Duties: >>Perform signal integrity studies on high-speed single-ended and differential >>buses to derive constraints on circuit design. >> > ya-da ya-da ya-da, remainder deleted > . . . > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------ To unsubscribe from si-list: si-list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field or to administer your membership from a web page, go to: //www.freelists.org/webpage/si-list For help: si-list-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'help' in the Subject field List archives are viewable at: //www.freelists.org/archives/si-list or at our remote archives: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/si-list/messages Old (prior to June 6, 2001) list archives are viewable at: http://www.qsl.net/wb6tpu