She gets the mail.
"I get this stuff every week. Some looks real, some doesn't. I want to ask someone who tells me plainly - without making me feel foolish."
When your parents get a sketchy mail, they usually call you. Scampilot answers the question they're actually asking.
"Tell me, I got a mail from DHL, they want €1.99 …"
Without Scampilot: 20 minutes on the phone, with the risk that the mail gets opened anyway.
With Scampilot: "Forward it to Scampilot, read the answer, call me back." Time: 3 minutes.
Burner aliases, forwarding rules, reading along in the background. This page right here.
You're in the right place. ↓
Step-by-step guide, big type, no computer jargon, no account needed.
For seniors →Senior residence, social services, charities - supervised use for many residents.
For care facilities →Scampilot was built with two people in mind: Renate, who gets the mail - and Mara, who is already her phone hotline today.
"I get this stuff every week. Some looks real, some doesn't. I want to ask someone who tells me plainly - without making me feel foolish."
"Mom calls because a Sparkasse mail looks off. I need something she trusts when I'm unreachable."
What it looks like in one family's week, from setup to the point where the phone goes quiet.
She signs up, creates a burner alias mom@in.scampilot.de, and adds a forwarding rule in her mom's mail account. Time: six minutes.
"Your parcel could not be delivered". Renate is unsure, forwards it. Twelve seconds later the answer comes back by email.
In the dashboard she sees: four checked mails, two flagged as scams (DHL phishing, Microsoft login), one warn (newsletter with a weird tracking link), one safe. She sleeps easier.
Renate has checked seven mails, five flagged as scams. Mara got called once - to confirm she could trust the answer. She could.
You need a Scampilot account and access to your family member's mail account. We recommend setting it up together - over coffee.
Free, no credit card. You get a primary alias your-name@in.scampilot.de right away.
Dashboard → Inboxes → "New burner alias". That way you always know who the request came from.
In your mom's mail account (Gmail, Web.de, GMX, T-Online): forwarding rule to the burner alias - or a bookmark to /check.
In the dashboard you see every report under your aliases, with model reasoning and signals. You'll notice immediately if Scampilot got it wrong.
Scampilot isn't a guardian. It's a tool that takes the routine questions away, so you have energy for the real crises.
Scampilot answers the easy cases - and those are 95 %. A fake bank login mail. A "parcel customs fee €1.99" trick. A "Microsoft detected activity" phishing. The whole phishing industry lives on these templates being copied a million times.
In the real crisis - when the account is already taken over, the money already wired - you, the family member, need to step in. You need to call the bank, the police, the card-block number. A tool can't do that.
We filter out the noise so you're still alert when it counts. No more, but no less either.
"We filter the noise out so you have energy for the real crises."- Product manifesto