24/7 scam analysis for normal humans

Before You Click.

ScamGuard A.I. gives you a fast, calm, plain-English second opinion when something feels suspicious. Upload a screenshot, paste a text, or ask a question, then get a risk analysis designed for people who do not want to become part-time cybercrime detectives.

Screenshot analysis Plain-English guidance Follow-up questions Trusted contact alerts

The scam problem is no longer just sketchy emails from a prince with “banking trouble.”

Modern scams are polished, personalized, emotionally manipulative, and increasingly assisted by AI. The people most targeted are often the least interested in reading a 47-page cybersecurity blog. So ScamGuard A.I. meets them where they are: “Is this real, or am I about to get financially drop-kicked?”

Screenshot-first review

Users can upload the exact message, popup, email, marketplace post, invoice, or text thread that made them nervous.

Follow-up questions

The assistant asks simple questions when context matters, such as whether the user recently ordered a package or has an account with the company mentioned.

Calm safety coaching

Instead of sounding like a tech manual wearing a necktie, the system explains what to do next in friendly, human language.

A simple workflow for the exact moment people need help.

ScamGuard A.I. is designed around speed, clarity, and the kind of practicality that stops the slow-motion mistakes scammers count on, before money or trust gets handed over.

1

Upload or paste

Add a screenshot, email text, SMS message, payment request, social post, marketplace listing, voicemail transcript, or web popup.

2

Risk scan

The system checks for urgency tactics, impersonation, payment pressure, suspicious links, grammar patterns, metadata clues, and emotional manipulation.

3

Plain-English verdict

Users receive a simple risk rating, why it looks suspicious, what not to do, and the safest verification path.

4

Learn as they go

Each answer teaches the user a tiny scam-avoidance lesson, because the goal is not just saving today, it is building sharper instincts tomorrow.

ScamGuard A.I. Online
My bank texted me and says my account is locked. It wants me to click this link. Is this real?
This is suspicious. Do not click the link yet. Banks may send alerts, but scammers often copy bank language and use fake links.
Risk Level: High
Safe next step: Call the number on the back of your bank card or go directly to the bank's official website by typing it yourself.
It says I only have 15 minutes.
That urgency is another red flag. Real banks do not usually require you to make a rushed security decision through a random text link. Annoying? Yes. Scammy? Very possibly.
Ask a follow-up...
Designed for non-technical users

Not a chatbot. A digital “call Matt before you do something expensive” button.

The interface is built for people who need help fast. No cyber jargon. No shame. No 19-step wizard created by someone who thinks “just inspect the URL headers” is normal dinner conversation.

Large buttons and simple choices, no learning curve
Clear risk labels: Low, Caution, High, Critical
Action-first guidance: “Do this next” and “Do not do this”
Optional trusted-contact alert when risk is high
Education snippets that build confidence over time
Start protecting yourself

Built for the people scammers count on being alone, rushed, or embarrassed.

ScamGuard A.I. is for anyone who has ever received something weird and thought, “This is either totally fake or I am about to ignore a real problem.” Modern scams are polished, personalized, and increasingly AI-assisted. Everyone is a target now.

Individuals

A safe place to ask before replying, clicking, paying, or sharing personal information. Works on the texts, emails, popups, and DMs that hit your phone every day.

Anyone helping someone vulnerable

Hand off the "is this real" question instead of becoming the unpaid 24/7 scam hotline for every sketchy text someone you care about receives.

Small businesses

Quickly check suspicious invoices, vendor messages, bank emails, payroll changes, payment instructions, and domain renewal scams.

Community groups

Offer organizations and local groups a simple shared safety resource with optional education sessions for members.

“Send it to ScamGuard before you send money.”

That is the entire behavioral goal. A memorable rule that catches scams at the decision point, before embarrassment, panic, or misplaced trust turns into a financial mess.

Product modules that make this more than a one-trick screenshot scanner.

The long-term value is in combining analysis, education, pattern memory, multi-user workflows, and practical prevention tools into one subscription.

AI

Scam Pattern Engine

Analyzes messages against known scam categories, including fake bank alerts, government impersonation, romance scams, fake tech support, marketplace scams, and emergency-impersonation scams.

ID

Impersonation Check

Flags claimed identities that should be verified outside the message, such as “your bank,” “Amazon,” “the IRS,” “law enforcement,” or “a relative in trouble.”

Safe Verification Paths

Guides users to safe next steps, like calling known numbers, opening official apps directly, or checking with a trusted contact before taking action.

Trusted Contact Alerts

Optional high-risk alerts can notify a contact you choose when the system detects a likely financial scam or coercive pressure.

Accessible Interface

Large text, clear buttons, simplified language, and direct recommendations without making anyone feel stupid for asking.

Education Library

Short lessons explain common scam tactics with examples, quizzes, and printable safety checklists.

Memberships designed around real humans, not corporate cybersecurity departments with seventeen acronyms.

Early pricing concept for product validation. Adjust the numbers later after testing usage, model costs, and support requirements.

Individual Guard

$9/mo
  • Screenshot and text scam checks
  • AI chat follow-ups
  • Basic risk rating
  • Education snippets
  • Email support
Choose Individual

Community Guard

Custom
  • Organizations and community groups
  • Small business teams
  • Education sessions
  • Custom branded portal
  • Priority support options
Talk to 186 Studios

Trust has to be engineered into the product, not sprinkled on top like cybersecurity glitter.

A scam-checking tool handles sensitive screenshots. That means privacy, retention, and user control need to be part of the product from day one.

Privacy-first review

Only upload what is needed for analysis. Sensitive screenshots should be handled with clear retention rules and simple deletion controls.

No shame design

The product should make users feel protected, not embarrassed. Scammers exploit fear. The interface should remove it.

Human escalation

For high-risk cases, optional escalation to a trusted contact or support workflow can help prevent irreversible action.

Suggested product note: ScamGuard A.I. should be positioned as decision support and education, not as legal, financial, banking, or law enforcement advice. When money, accounts, identity theft, threats, or personal safety are involved, users should verify through official channels and contact appropriate institutions directly.

Questions normal people will actually ask.

Can ScamGuard tell me with 100% certainty if something is a scam?

No. It gives a risk assessment, explains red flags, asks clarifying questions, and recommends safe verification steps. The safest answer is often not “trust me,” it is “verify through a known official source.”

What can I upload?

Screenshots of texts, emails, popups, online marketplace messages, suspicious invoices, social media messages, payment requests, fake login pages, and other scam-like communications.

Is this only for one type of user?

No. Everyone gets hit with phishing, marketplace scams, fake shipping alerts, job scams, bank impersonation, and AI-enhanced social engineering. ScamGuard is built so the same workflow works whether you are a casual texter, a small business owner, or someone helping a relative who keeps getting targeted.

What makes this different from just asking a general AI chatbot?

ScamGuard A.I. is built around a narrow safety workflow: identify risk, explain why, ask what matters, prevent dangerous actions, and teach the user how to verify safely. General chatbots can help, but they are not always designed around this exact moment of risk.