Scam Detective
Domain

www.springerlink.com

First seen Feb 23, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 12 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

This cluster centers on 2382 connected domains tagged as PureHVNC, elf, sh. 572 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 557 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2228 complaints with federal agencies. Geog...

This cluster centers on 2396 connected domains tagged as 156-233-71-230, Quakbot, lnk. 586 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 565 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2237 complaints with federal agen...

This cluster centers on 1895 connected domains tagged as BeaverTail, RedLineStealer, password: 2026. 113 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 934 phone numbers (8772427372, 1319641540, 1319641221) with 524 FTC complaints; 683 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2093 complaints wit...

This cluster centers on 2416 connected domains tagged as BABADEDA, WallStealer, meterpreter. 607 of these domains have been flagged by threat intelligence feeds including Google Safe Browsing and URLhaus. The connected infrastructure includes 969 phone numbers (5086371451, 9366439335, 1842506726) with 570 FTC complaints; 690 email addresses (kellymoore_64@yahoo.com, schantzsybg7@aol.com, online.motors@consultant.com). Across all linked entities, consumers have filed 2243 complaints with federa...

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, ...

Details

Registrar
EuroDNS S.A.
Registration Date
1/30/2003
First Seen
2/23/2026

Related Domains

No known connections to other entities yet.

Community Reports

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

Shy + Introvert = book smart, but not successful? I am thinking aloud here, not trying to debunk any long held scientific theories here. The other day I posed something regarding some social behavior that I had experienced and that I fond weird](http://www.reddit.com/r/explainlikeimfive/comments/zbz4q/why_do_people_get_angry_at_math/). No need to check the original post, unless you want to. What was interesting to me, is a comment made by **kiadel** where s/he said ***this paper explores people's tendency to defend their position in the face of evidence: http://www.springerlink.com/content/064786861r21m257/fulltext.html In short, when faced with evidence, people usually just argue their own pre-existing point of view louder rather than learning something new.*** Which blew me away. The study highlighted and confirmed what I had observed: people would vocally defend their wrong position, and if they confronted with evidences that they were indeed wrong, they don't change their minds and actually strengthen their original position. Wait, there's more! From the paper itself: *We also document several instances of a “backfire effect” in which corrections actually increase misperceptions among the group in question.* Of course I see this though my own lens, and it makes no sense. Does it? I grew up introvert and shy, from what I see it's a pretty common occurrence. As a byproduct of that, as if introvert and shy was not enough, I was also insecure; actually I believe that shy if a form of being insecure; so I should say that I grew up introvert and insecure. I am still introvert, but not that shy anymore, and not that insecure either, probably because I know a lot, and... I don't talk about stuff that I don't know. And that's what puzzles me about the incident that I observed, people who didn't know what they were talking about talking out of context, being wrong, and very loudly defending their (wrong) position. I have seen it happen a lot in business, wher

4950 days ago41 upvotes

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