Launch-and-burn domain dropper
Teslurk
Teslurk is a newly registered domain (17 days old) with no email infrastructure, matching the classic pattern of temporary fraud infrastructure that gets abandoned once complaints mount. The bare-bones page content and complete absence of legitimate organizational signals strongly suggest this is a disposable vehicle for scamming or credential harvesting.
2 independent sources (domain-age corroboration, missing email infrastructure) point the same way.
Domain corroboration
Three independent records are cross-referenced to validate how long this domain has really operated.
Email infrastructure: none published
Hosted on: AMAZON-02 - Amazon.com, Inc. · AS16509 · US
All 2 independent age signals agree this domain is under a month old.
Signals
- highteslurk.com is brand new across 2 independent records
Registration, certificate-transparency, and/or web-archive records independently agree that teslurk.com is less than a month old. Corroborated freshness is far stronger than any single "new domain" check and is the classic launch-and-burn profile.
Domain registration: 2026-06-13Earliest known TLS certificate: 2026-06-13 - lowteslurk.com publishes no email infrastructure
No MX, SPF, or DMARC records were found for teslurk.com. Established organizations almost always run authenticated email; the complete absence is consistent with throwaway infrastructure.
no MX / SPF / DMARC - highLinked domain teslurk.com is only 17 days old
The registry's RDAP record shows teslurk.com was registered on 2026-06-13. A marketing push running on a domain this young is the classic launch-and-burn pattern — by the time complaints accumulate, the operator has rotated to a fresh domain.
registered 2026-06-13source: rdap
Recommended actions
- Do not enter credentials, payment, or wallet details.
- Report the URL to the relevant platform / registrar.
- Warn anyone who shared the link.
Source context
Checked against CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities, RDAP domain registration age, abuse.ch URLhaus, abuse.ch ThreatFox.
A snapshot of public page content at scan time, plus automated reputation and credibility signals. Not a definitive judgment — how Hugin reads evidence.