WebVetted Beta
Recommendation
Proceed
Overall Summary
Safe
Why we think so

Under My Roof (undermyroof.app) appears to be a small home-inventory app and companion site with an App Store presence, social profiles, and press mentions. There are no phishing or crypto-blacklist matches and no public scam reports in news or review aggregators. Technical traces show a recently issued SSL cert and limited WHOIS detail, and site traffic is very low (hundreds of visits/month), so the project looks legitimate but small and lightly maintained. Recommendation: proceed with normal caution — verify contact details before sharing sensitive data or payments.

Confidence Score
68%

Risk Insights

🟢

Low traffic but real product presence

About 500 visits in Sept 2025 — niche landing page or small user base.
App Store listings and user guides show a functional product outside the website.

No blacklist or phishing flags found

Google Safe Browsing returned no threats.
Crypto scam scanner did not list the domain.
⚠️

Contact details incomplete on site

Scraper did not find support email or phone — only social links.
Verify contact channels before sharing sensitive info.

Contradictory Signals

Public signals show a legitimate app, but limited traffic and sparse registry data mean confirmation should come from app-store developer contact or company records.

Signal A: Press coverage and app-store listings indicate an established product

Signal B: Very low traffic and empty WHOIS reduce traceability

Category Scores

Identity 70/100
Reputation 75/100
Technical 55/100
Content 70/100
Legal 60/100
Business Validity 65/100

Red Flags & Warnings

  • No public WHOIS record was returned in the evidence set and WHOIS array is empty, reducing traceability of the registrant.
  • SSL certificate is newly issued (valid from 2025-09-04) and has a short validity window in the record, which can indicate a recent registration or short-term hosting.
  • Scraper found no support email or phone number on the site; only social links are available, which makes direct verification harder.
  • Very low traffic and low global rank mean fewer third‑party signals (fewer reviews, fewer independent confirmations).

🔎 Detailed Checks & Analysis

identity

Score: 70/100
Passed

"The product is consistently named across the site, app pages, and third‑party writeups; publisher references (Binary Formations) match LinkedIn and user guides, which supports identity verification."

Reason: Site and app listings point to a consistent product identity and a publisher (Binary Formations) with LinkedIn presence.

reputation

Score: 75/100
Passed

"Independent articles (iMore) and app-review aggregators show favorable commentary and no scam reports; no negative consumer‑protection hits found in the provided search results."

Reason: Press mentions and app reviews are positive, and there are no flagged complaints or BBB fraud reports in the evidence.

technical

Score: 55/100
Failed

"DNS points to Hover nameservers and an A record exists, but absence of WHOIS data and a short/ recent SSL lifecycle reduce technical traceability and raise a need for caution."

Reason: Technical footprint is minimal: low traffic, empty WHOIS in the provided record, and a recently issued SSL certificate.

content

Score: 70/100
Passed

"Documentation (user guides) and App Store descriptions match the website messaging; content does not request unusual financial flows or sensitive credentials on the landing page."

Reason: Site content, user guides, and app descriptions align and describe a non-financial home-inventory product.

legal

Score: 60/100
Passed

"USPTO search returned no matching trademarks for the domain string; no lawsuits or consumer-complaint records surfaced in the aggregated results."

Reason: No USPTO trademark conflicts or public legal actions were found in the provided evidence.

business_validity

Score: 65/100
Passed

"App Store entries, a company LinkedIn and user guides support that a legitimate small business operates the app, though public contact emails are missing and traffic is low."

Reason: There is a plausible business presence (app listings, company references), but limited independent coverage and contact transparency lower confidence.

Your Next Steps

  • 1
    Open the App Store listing (iOS) and check recent user reviews, update dates, and developer contact listed on the app page.
  • 2
    Confirm a reachable support email or phone number on the site or developer pages before sending personal data.
  • 3
    Verify ownership via LinkedIn/company pages (Binary Formations) and cross-check developer name on the App Store and the site.
  • 4
    Avoid sending money or large payments through the site; use official app-store payment channels or verified vendor portals.
  • 5
    If you need higher assurance, request a business address or invoice and confirm via an independent source (LinkedIn/company registration).

Evidence & Citations