Email Address Intelligence

Is norispro@794b3bb371e0efef8aba1f468e4d660c6696.com a scam?

This email address is flagged in our threat intelligence database. Review the evidence below before interacting.

Threat Intelligence Listing

Flagged in Threat Feeds

This email address appears in threat-intelligence sources (PhishTank or community reports). We have not yet received a direct user submission for it. Exercise caution before replying or clicking links.

Risk Score
85
Evidence Sources
0
Community Safety Rating
★★☆☆☆ 2/5 (1 report)
1 = Dangerous · 5 = Safe

About this email address

Deterministic analysis derived from the email address itself and our threat database. No AI-generated guesses, no external assumptions.

  • Dedicated domain email

    Sent from a domain (794b3bb371e0efef8aba1f468e4d660c6696.com) rather than a free webmail provider. While this can indicate a legitimate business, dedicated-domain scam emails are also common. Scammers register cheap domains specifically for outbound campaigns, so the domain itself should be examined for legitimacy signals.

  • .com TLD

    The .com extension is among the lower-risk TLDs in published abuse rankings, typical of established legitimate sites. Note that even low-risk TLDs are routinely abused by scammers, so the TLD alone does not validate this specific domain.

  • Domain structure

    This domain consists primarily of digits (21 digits, 18 letters). Numeric domains are rare for legitimate businesses and are common in phishing kits that auto-generate domains in bulk for one-time use.

  • Database timeline

    Added to the RecentScam database a week ago.

Independent Verification

Recent Evidence

May 19, 2026 via User Report

""Generic credential phishing email with obfuscated domain using hexadecimal hash. Victim instructed to verify account information through suspicious link. Scammer harvests login credentials and personal identification data.""

May 18, 2026 via User Report

""Phishing email from obfuscated domain impersonates an e-commerce platform requesting account reactivation. Victims click embedded malicious link and submit personal and financial details. Data is sold or used for account compromise and unauthorized transactions.""

May 17, 2026 via User Report

""Generic phishing campaign using obfuscated domain. Scammer impersonates unnamed financial institution and requests credential verification. Victim is prompted to visit a cloned login page.""

Safety Checklist: What to do next

Do Not Reply

Do not click any links or download attachments. Mark as spam.

Secure Accounts

Change passwords immediately if you logged in via a suspicious link.

Report Headers

Forward the full email headers to your email provider's abuse team.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is norispro@794b3bb371e0efef8aba1f468e4d660c6696.com a scam email address?

norispro@794b3bb371e0efef8aba1f468e4d660c6696.com is flagged in our threat intelligence database with a risk score of 85/100. Do not reply to or click any links from this sender.

What type of scam does norispro@794b3bb371e0efef8aba1f468e4d660c6696.com send?

Reported email addresses in our database typically send phishing attempts, fake invoice scams, account takeover attempts, or advance-fee fraud. Check the evidence section above for specific details about reports on this address.

How do I report a phishing email?

Forward the email to reportphishing@apwg.org and to your email provider's abuse address. Report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. In Gmail, click the three-dot menu and select 'Report phishing'. In Outlook, use 'Report Message' in the toolbar.

Can I get malware from opening this email?

Opening the email body alone is usually safe in modern email clients. The danger lies in clicking links or downloading attachments. Never open unexpected attachments or click links in emails from unknown senders, even if the email appears legitimate.

How do I block this sender?

In Gmail: open the email, click the three-dot menu (⋮), and select 'Block [sender name]'. In Outlook: right-click the email and choose 'Block Sender'. In Apple Mail: go to Mail > Preferences > Rules and create a rule to delete messages from this address.

Data Sources: Records are sourced from public threat intelligence feeds (URLhaus, OpenPhish) and community scam reports (Reddit r/Scams, r/phishing). RecentScam does not independently verify all claims. The Risk Score is a calculated metric, not a legal judgment. To dispute a record, visit our Removal Request page.