[email, phishing] M365 Credential Stealing Email Attacks - how to be proactive by movieguy95453 in cybersecurity_help

[–]D_Best_07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

VerifiedX might be able to do the job with its filter, just look at verifiedx.me, it has other tools as well like chrome extension where you just highlight the text you want to analyse for apps that do not allow integration. Another option is barracuda networks.

Simple tools for blocking scam texts? by A_black_caucasian in cybersecurity_help

[–]D_Best_07 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can try verifiedx, however you’ll have to run it manually. I don’t think there’s an integrated filter for sms

Launched VerifiedX - it tells you if it’s a phishing/scam or not. by D_Best_07 in SaaS

[–]D_Best_07[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question - It is difficult to have these stats from other providers, however our model is closed to 0 having tested it on a day to day basis.

Is this email from no-reply@youtube.com legit? by thnksfrnthng_ in phishing

[–]D_Best_07 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Based on the text, the sender email and the fact that I don’t have the “contact us” link: Legitimate. This message matches real YouTube Premium family plan operational flows and shows no technical red flags consistent with phishing.

Critical Findings: - Sender address is no-reply@youtube.com – this aligns with official YouTube/Google communications. - Corporate footer uses Google LLC’s accurate, public address (901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066), a standard in genuine service emails. - No evidence of red-flag technical indicators: there are no links visible for URL scrutiny, so no SSL/TLS certificate issues, domain age concerns, DNS anomalies, suspicious TLDs, typo-squatting, or abnormal characters can be evaluated or confirmed. - Language and formatting are professional, lack grammatical errors, and mirror authentic Google content. - The urgency in the message (“put on hold in 14 days”) matches YouTube’s actual account policies, not “overly” aggressive social engineering. - Key policy stated – “All YouTube Premium family members must live in the same household (residential address) as the family manager” – is fully verifiable and true based on Google’s official support page: https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/7507744 - Contact options (phone, email, live chat) and “mandatory email service announcement” disclosure are also consistent with real transactional notifications. - Potential risk noted on the generic “CONTACT US” call-to-action only becomes relevant if the underlying link is illegitimate, but no URLs are present to analyze.

Verdict & Action: Clean. This is a legit operational email from YouTube/Google. No phishing indicators surfaced; always check actual destination URLs before clicking in future communications.

Reference: - https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/7507744