Scam Detective
Domain

www.phishd.com

First seen Feb 22, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 30 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

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
Safenames Ltd
Registration Date
7/26/2013
First Seen
2/22/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

The dangers of feeling attached online It’s only human nature to connect with others, to open letters, to click on attachments – but such cyber-urges can lead to catastrophic consequences Human beings are programmed to connect with each other – to attach, if you like. Research in human psychology tells us so, and you can feel it every time a letter drops onto your doormat, or an email pings into your inbox. Who’s that from? What’s in it? I’ve got to find out. Now, whereas a letter can’t do you any harm – unless it’s bulky and ticking – an email attachment can certainly cause problems. In time, most people get wise to the original scams, so the bad guys have to devise new ways of getting the information or the control that they want. Increasingly, emails asking directly for personal data or passwords, and those containing suspicious links, are being joined or replaced by emails with suspicious attachments. The trouble is, people actually seem more ready to open an attachment than to click on a link. Perhaps the psychology here is that, whilst a link can take you anywhere, an attachment is just there, right? So….how much harm can it do? Now is the time for you and your colleagues to recognise the severity of this threat! In February 2014, social networking giant, Facebook revealed it had been the victim of hackers. In April 2014, Security Week reported that according to one leading study, 30% of targeted spear-phishing attacks detected in 2013 were aimed at small businesses (1-250 employees). It was even worse for large enterprises, with 39% of targeted spear-phishing attacks sent to enterprises with more than 2,500 employees. In other words, size and sophistication is no guide to protection, it’s just a more exciting and lucrative challenge for ambitious hackers. Spear-phishing is no respecter either of type of business, private sector or public sector and individually targeted attacks can also move up a gear and become high profile ‘whaling’ attacks on

4102 days ago1 upvote

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