SafeHouse: The Family AI Scam Defense Workbook is not a video course in the traditional sense, but a family-focused anti-scam education workbook delivered as PDF + EPUB. It focuses on high-pressure scenarios such as AI voice cloning, fake emergencies, fake bank alerts, romance scams, and urgent money transfers. Its goal is not to train users to identify every scam, but to help families establish fixed response routines before panic sets in: pause, verify, freeze payment channels, escalate the situation, and review regularly.
In terms of content, it falls under AI scam prevention, family digital safety, and senior financial safety. Core tools include a safe-word system, trusted number lists, callback rules, payment guardrails, conversation scripts, a first-24-hours response checklist, and family meeting pages. Its βSAFEHouseβ method emphasizes five steps: Stop, Authenticate, Freeze, Escalate, and Household. It is suitable for posting at home or keeping in a family folder for repeated use. The format is a self-study ebook/workbook, with no live classes, recorded videos, or 1-on-1 coaching, and there is no mention of exams, certification, or a completion certificate.
It is currently offered as an introductory launch offer at 19.99 CAD, with a one-time purchase and no subscription. It includes the full workbook, three pages of quick-start material, a 30-day workbook, and printable scripts, checklists, cards, and worksheets. Taxes/VAT may be calculated at checkout. After purchase, users receive a private access link via the checkout email; if the link expires, fresh access help is available. For access or refund issues, users need to contact support by email within 7 days. The page does not specify the available payment methods.
Its strengths are that it is highly scenario-based and easy to start using. It explicitly states that no technical background is required, making it suitable for ordinary families to quickly establish shared rules. Its conversation scripts emphasize respect, which can reduce friction when adult children discuss scam prevention with their parents. The printable materials are also useful for workshops run by community groups, libraries, churches, senior centers, or banks. The main limitation is the lack of information about the instructor or organization behind it, making it difficult to assess the authorβs security credentials. The content is also mainly built around English-speaking environments and common North American payment/reporting contexts, such as gift cards, Bitcoin ATMs, wire transfers, and courier cash. Chinese users would need to adapt it to local banks, public security authorities, anti-fraud centers, and payment platform procedures.
It is suitable for adult children and caregivers who want to establish family anti-scam rules with parents, grandparents, or spouses. It is also a good fit for community groups running basic scam-prevention activities. It is not suitable for those looking for a systematic cybersecurity course, Chinese-language instruction, instructor Q&A, or a certificate. The main text does not provide information about access from China, so availability is unknown; payment methods are also unclear. Chinese users may prefer to combine it with the National Anti-Fraud Center App, bank anti-fraud education, public security awareness materials, and local community courses as alternatives or supplements.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on safehousebook.com official site.
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