whospam.report positions itself as an Email Forensics & Abuse Intelligence service, focused on solving the problem of βwho is sending email while impersonating my domain.β The site offers free tools for domain health checks, email header analysis, DMARC parsing, abuse report generation, and DNS record building, covering the three stages of checking, investigation, and reporting.
In terms of protection type, it leans more toward email authentication checking and forensic assistance rather than traditional email gateway blocking. Domain Health Checker can check SPF, DKIM, DMARC, and MX records, then provide an AβF score and remediation suggestions. Header Analyzer can break down email routing paths, authentication results, and suspicious patterns. DMARC Parser can parse aggregate XML reports and identify which sources are impersonating a domain. Abuse Report Builder can generate report materials for ISPs, hosting providers, or organizations. DNS Record Builder generates records that can be copied to a DNS provider.
Deployment is web-based and online, with the page emphasizing that no signup is required. Users can enter a domain, paste email headers, or upload/paste DMARC reports. For management and alerting, the page mentions that free monitoring can be set up so users are notified promptly when changes occur, but it does not disclose alert channels, frequency, team permissions, or audit capabilities. Integration capabilities mainly appear in the form of generated DNS records and abuse report links; there is no visible mention of enterprise integrations such as APIs, SIEM, Slack, or ticketing systems.
The pricing information is very clear: Free forever and no credit card required. This makes it friendly for temporary troubleshooting, individual site owners, and small teams. However, the page does not provide information on compliance certifications, data processing, privacy retention, SLA, or commercial support, so it should not be regarded as a security platform with established enterprise compliance backing.
Its strengths are a low barrier to entry and a fairly complete toolchain, connecting SPF/DKIM/DMARC checks, email header forensics, and abuse report generation in one workflow. Its weaknesses are limited information around automated remediation, centralized management, access control, and third-party integrations. It is suitable for domain owners, operations teams, and security staff who need to quickly identify issues when facing phishing, blacklisting, or suspected domain impersonation. Large organizations that require continuous governance and auditing will still need to pair it with a professional DMARC monitoring solution or email security gateway.
The page does not provide information about access from mainland China, payment, or localization. Since it is marked as free and does not require a credit card, the payment barrier is not obvious; network availability should still be verified through actual testing. If access is unstable, alternatives include built-in checking tools from DNS providers, open-source email header analysis tools, or mature DMARC management platforms.
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 superlife.me official site.
superlife.me is an Unknown Cybersecurity provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach superlife.me directly.