Scam Detective
Domain

mylife.com

First seen Feb 22, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 115 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

This cluster centers on 1 connected domains identified through shared infrastructure and registration patterns. Do not click links to any of the flagged domains. If you have visited one, check your accounts for unauthorized activity and consider changing your passwords. You can report suspicious contacts to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC at consumercomplaints.fcc.gov. This campaign was identified through automated analysis of threat intelligence feeds and entity relationship mapp...

This cluster centers on 2764 connected domains tagged as BeaverTail, Kaiji, fbf543. 645 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1132 phone numbers (7638857447, 8664372914, 2157987305) with 10266 FTC complaints; 146 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8616274 CFPB complaints; 298 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vm...

This cluster centers on 3287 connected domains tagged as HijackLoader, RemcosRAT, screenconnect. 617 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1649 phone numbers (5408463620, 8552597377, 8007873903) with 7110 FTC complaints; 143 companies (Informative LLC, HomePlus Corporation, Doral Capital Corporation) with 8547081 CFPB complaints; 807 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@...

This cluster centers on 2874 connected domains tagged as QuasarRAT, StealitStealer, pw-k53mv9bc. 652 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1375 phone numbers (2157987305, 2025069230, 2028641298) with 14635 FTC complaints; 160 companies (JPMORGAN CHASE & CO., Advanced Resolution Services Inc., EVERBANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8680419 CFPB complaints; 299 email addresses (abuse@fb.com, ...

This cluster centers on 1486 connected domains tagged as None, keylogger. 5 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 1364 phone numbers (3124141737, 3163966869, 8553892999) with 17909 FTC complaints; 170 companies (EQUIFAX, INC., TRANSUNION INTERMEDIATE HOLDINGS, INC., BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION) with 8747332 CFPB complaints; 187 email addresses (xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@vmh5.grup...

Details

Registrar
Network Solutions, LLC
Registration Date
4/22/1997
First Seen
2/22/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

MyLife.com are sloppy to the point of fraud and will LIE about people just to coerce them into a membership only to discover none of it was true. if they do have something it was exaggerated, out-of-date, was actually belonging to somebody else, you can't access it, or it simply does not exist. When I first saw MyLife.com advertised online I went to the website and upon arrival was made aware that I was already a subject in their records. NEGATIVE Records. Curious about these records. I paid for a 1.00 trial subscription. Once in I immediately checked out what NEGATIVE Records they were talking about. Turns out, the records weren't even mine but "my associates." Yeah. My parents. Court Records from bankruptcies in the 80s from before I was 10. They lied, I had no negative records. In fact their tune changed the instant I signed up. I was a great citizen. However, there was no way to dispute their information or the way they were using it. MyLife.com was simply capitalizing upon this as a reason to lower their "reputation score of my parents and EVERYBODY who was related to them or knew them. Aggravated, I corrected the extent of what I could, and canceled before my trial ended. About a decade later, I was looking to reconnect with some old friends, and was not having any luck. Mind you MyLife.com had been sending me regular spam emails reminding me of my damaging associates and once in awhile I would be told someone had looked me up in their system. Again, I ran across an ad by MyLife.com touting their help finding people. I suckered. If it helped me find my friends who moved away. This time I paid for a basic membership, but I discovered really quickly that they're information was just as bad or worse than what they had for me. I discovered I could log into my original account for "free." I was hit with pages of disclaimers and BS loading prompts sh [BBB Scam Type: Online Purchase] [Business: MyLife.com] [Location: TX, USA- 7

2 days ago

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

How did you know when your idenity was stolen? I knew when I was getting offers in the mail, and my name appeared on class actions for products I never bought. Ok, that might sound strange because everyone gets offers in the mail, right? Wrong! I almost never get offers in the mail. Do offers in the mail mean for sure that your identity was stolen. Of course not! Does a lack of offers in the mail mean your identity is safe? Of course not! But getting junk mail suddenly is a symptom that something is happening. If companies you have never done business with suddenly know you, then something is amiss. Let me explain….. I told the Direct Marketing Assiciation (you know the 'do not mail me' folks) that I am deceased. I contacted all four credit agencies (three at the time, four now) and told them to opt me out of pre-screen permanently. I contacted every major bulk email provider, and every major bulk mail provider and told them all to remove my name. Once my name was removed, I would know if someone was using it, becuase my name would show back up on mailing lists beloging to any entity that is not a DMA member. I contacted every major data miner and told them to remove my name. When I got junk mail, I wrote on the envelope “Addressee diseased”. I also made a fake death certificate and mailed it to the most persistent companies that graced my postal box. I went up on Mylife.com and posted my death. No that is not illegal. We did the same for my wife, son, brother, and just about everyone connected to me. After doing all of the above, my mailbox, and my email fell silent. Anytime I get something unexpected in the mail, or email, I can investigate it, and find out how the party got my information. The fact that I get maybe two a year means I can commit 8 hours of research into one junk offer. If you get junk offers daily, then you clearly cannot take the time to toughly investigate even a small fraction of them. That is ultimately how I knew someone was prete

2168 days ago1 upvote

Share Your Experience

What's Your Exposure?

Know your risk exposure to this message with a Thorough Analysis. It returns a detailed report covering the complaint history, your data breach exposure, related scam entities, and risk signals tied to this email message. Check the box and enter your email address now.

Proton VPN Block malicious sites and encrypt your connection

Proton VPN routes your traffic through encrypted servers and blocks known malware domains. Free plan available.