Phishing email analysis

Is this suspicious email phishing or fraud? Mooth gives you a verdict and the reasons in minutes, plus exactly what to do, so you avoid being fooled and leaking data.

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Should you click this email? Don't guess, let Mooth look.

One well-disguised email is enough to trip someone up

You and your colleagues get email all day. Some of it is inevitably suspicious: claiming to be a bank, your boss, a partner, asking you to click a link, open an attachment, wire money, or change a payment account. They're often disguised well enough that you can't tell real from fake at a glance.

The problem is:

  • These emails are hard to guard against, and a small team has no one to vet them
  • You (ops, HR, finance, admin) aren't a security specialist and can't spot the flaws in the disguise
  • Properly analyzing one email takes real time you don't have
  • Fraud emails impersonating your boss or a partner (BEC) look especially real, and one slip wires money to the wrong place or changes the wrong account
  • You want to confirm with someone, but fear pasting an email with sensitive info into an online tool and causing a second leak

And the reality is that a person slipping up out of carelessness is the most common way attacks succeed. The biggest risk isn't sophisticated technology, it's a convincing email fooling an unguarded person.

That's what Mooth is here to judge, fast and safely.

Three steps to see whether an email is phishing

1

Give Mooth the suspicious email

Give Mooth the email content, sender, links, and so on, and it handles them safely.
2

Mooth analyzes and judges

It checks whether the sender is forged, whether links and attachments are problematic, and whether the wording is a social-engineering tactic, identifying phishing or fraud.
3

Get the verdict and what to do

It tells you whether the email is phishing, why, where the danger is, and what to do, in plain language.

If you're staring at an email you can't read, let Mooth take a look for free, and get an answer in minutes.

What Mooth focuses on

Sees through the disguise of phishing and fraud from several angles:

What it analyzesWhat it solves
Sender originCheck whether the sender address shows forgery or impersonation (SPF, DKIM, DMARC and other technical verification)
Links & attachmentsJudge where a link points, whether it's a phishing site, and whether an attachment is dangerous
Wording & social engineeringIdentify common tactics like "manufacture urgency," "impersonate authority," "lure a click"
Business fraudIdentify fraud emails impersonating your boss or a partner (BEC), especially around wiring money or changing accounts
What to do, plainlyTell you in plain language whether to ignore it, delete it, verify it, and whether to warn colleagues

Mooth turns specialized email analysis into one conclusion you can act on directly.

What an analysis looks like

Verdict: this is a fraud email impersonating your boss (BEC). Do not wire money.

Why: ① the sender address looks like your boss's name, but the actual domain differs from the company's by one letter — it's forged; ② the email manufactures urgency ("right away," "urgent," "keep it quiet"), a classic fraud tactic; ③ it asks you to wire to an unfamiliar account, the most common goal of BEC fraud.

Where the danger is: if you comply, the money goes straight to the scammer's account and is hard to recover. This kind of fraud specifically targets finance and admin.

What to do: ① don't reply, don't wire; ② verify directly with your boss in person or by phone (not via the contact in the email); ③ forward this email to warn finance and colleagues about the same wave of fraud.

Every item spells out whether it's phishing, why, and what to do, with a response you can follow even without security knowledge.

Why Mooth fits checking your email

It spots the flaws in the disguise for you. The subtle forgeries in a sender address and the tactics in the wording, which you may not catch, Mooth identifies at a glance, vetting them for you.

It specifically watches for boss and partner impersonation. BEC is the best-disguised and most costly kind of fraud. Mooth is especially good at spotting these "looks like someone you know, but is a scammer" emails.

It speaks plainly and gives you a response you can follow. Not a pile of technical analysis, but directly whether to ignore it, how to verify, and whether to warn others.

It handles your email safely. You don't have to worry about pasting an email with sensitive info somewhere you don't trust. Mooth analyzes it safely, with no second leak.

It's for everyone. Ops, HR, finance, admin — security background or not, anyone can let Mooth take a look at a suspicious email and get an answer in minutes.

Is your email safe

Analyzing an email means providing the email content, so:

  • It only analyzes the email you provide and won't reach into unrelated systems.
  • Nothing enters model training — the email content is used only for this analysis or a context you authorize.
  • Deletable and revocable — you can delete the conversation any time.

Let Mooth look at this email now

No security knowledge needed, no preparation at all. Give Mooth the suspicious email, and within minutes you'll know whether it's phishing, where the danger is, and what to do.

Better to let Mooth see it clearly than to hesitate over whether to click or wire.