Possible brand impersonation
Typosquat domain trello.events mimics Trello branding for an unrelated wedding and event-planning service. The page looks styled like a known brand but may not be authentic. Check the URL carefully and navigate to the brand's real site before signing in or paying.
Is trello.events legit or a scam?
Be careful — we couldn't verify this site.
Typosquat domain trello.events mimics Trello branding for an unrelated wedding and event-planning service.
Score breakdown
See the live page ↓These checks passed — but they don't clear the site. A clean antivirus result, valid SSL, and a calm server only mean it isn't hosting malware; they say nothing about whether the business is real. This verdict is based on the site's conduct and content, not a malware detection.
If this is a scam — what it means for you
You were probably about to log in or pay, thinking this was the real company.
If it is, it's a look-alike copy, not the genuine site. Your login or payment goes to scammers — the real company never sees it.
If this is a scam, how it works
The typical trap, step by step
This site is unverified — it may be legitimate. If it is a scam, this is the playbook pages like it follow:
They register a look-alike domain and copy a trusted brand's website.
You arrive via a link or ad, believing it's the genuine company.
You log in or pay — to the impostor, not the brand.
Your credentials or money go to the scammers; the real company never sees it.
If a site follows these steps, treat it as unsafe — close it and don't enter anything.
Analysis Summary
Website Preview

Automated page render — captured in a safe sandbox. What an ordinary visitor would see when loading the site. Marker positions are approximate. See full visual analysis →
Visual analysis
We capture a fresh screenshot of the live page and ask a vision model to look for scam visual patterns — fake trust badges, countdown timers, overlay pop-ups, and visual clones of legitimate brands.
Visual red flags detected in the screenshot
The website appears to be a standard business landing page for an event planning or entertainment company with no visible indicators of malicious intent.
What our vision model saw
4 signalsProfessional layout for an event entertainment service
Standard navigation menu present
Floating WhatsApp contact icon in the bottom right corner
No suspicious urgency tactics or fake security badges detected
Intelligence
The domain name directly copies the Trello trademark with a .events extension, creating clear impersonation risk. Our antivirus network and browser blocklists returned clean results, and the page itself shows a standard business layout without login forms or urgency tactics. However, the evidence package confirms the domain is not registered to Atlassian and that scammers routinely abuse the Trello name for phishing and malware distribution. The page loads external scripts from cashonmobiles.in and intsagram.com, both unrelated to legitimate event services. No business registration records were located for Trello Entertainment at this domain. These factors together place the site in the suspicious tier rather than outright malicious.
Web Research Findings
Our live research agent queries scam-report databases, consumer-review sites, news coverage, and general web search for trello.events, then cross-checks business-registration records and look-alike domain patterns. Everything below is pulled from what it actually found.
- The domain 'trello.events' is not an official property of Atlassian, the owner of Trello.
- Trello's official website is trello.com.
- The phrase 'Upcoming Trello Events' is a standard footer/section on official Atlassian/Trello community pages, which may lead to confusion regarding the domain's legitimacy.
- Scammers frequently abuse the Trello platform to host malicious files or send phishing invitations to join boards, often impersonating company executives or recruiters.
- There is no evidence of a legitimate business entity operating under the name 'Trello Event' at this specific domain; search results for 'Trello Event' refer to local wedding planners or general project management usage.
- Atlassian Community
"Phishing emails originating from Trello... requesting their CEO's and CFO's to join a board to 'review costings'."
- Atlassian Community
"Adversaries posing as Trello recruiters and advertising Trello job opportunities through SMS and Whatsapp messaging."
- Atlassian Community
"There was a link that redirected me to a Trello board where I was supposed to download a document, but my antivirus software warned me about malware."
The term 'Trello Events' is frequently used in legitimate Atlassian/Trello documentation to refer to community gatherings or webhook triggers, but 'trello.events' is not the official Trello website.
Atlassian Community threads document multiple instances of phishing emails and fake recruiter messages that impersonate Trello to distribute malware or harvest credentials. No consumer-review sites or business directories list a legitimate event-planning company operating at trello.events. The evidence confirms the domain is not an official Atlassian property and that the Trello brand is frequently misused by scammers.
Threat Detection
Scam Network
Antivirus Engines
Security Scans
Checked against the major public blocklists used by browsers and security tools — no hits.
Reputation Sources
How this domain rates across independent threat-intelligence and blocklist providers.
Scam-Type Likelihood
1 scam-type patterns detected
1 of 21 categories showed signals
We check every URL against 21 distinct scam categories so the verdict tells you not just how risky the page is, but what kind of risk it carries. Each meter pulls from page signals, web reports, our AI analyst, vision, and the scam-network cluster — not from raw AV labels.
- Domain is a typosquat of trello.com.
- AI analyst tagged this as a brand / clone-site impersonation.
1 of 21 categories showed signals
We check every URL against 21 distinct scam categories so the verdict tells you not just how risky the page is, but what kind of risk it carries. Each meter pulls from page signals, web reports, our AI analyst, vision, and the scam-network cluster — not from raw AV labels.
- Domain is a typosquat of trello.com.
- AI analyst tagged this as a brand / clone-site impersonation.
Technical Details
domain · encryption · redirects · server reputation · referencedThe plumbing behind the site — who registered it, how it’s encrypted, where it’s hosted, and where it links out. A valid certificate or a calm server doesn’t mean the business is honest — scam sites pass these checks too. Use this to corroborate the verdict, not to overturn it.
Contact Verification
We fetched the page and looked for real-world contact details. Legitimate businesses almost always publish an email on their own domain, a phone number, and a postal address. Scam shops usually don't.
- No postal address visible on the page.
- Contact email on the site's own domain (getcrazy@trello.events).
- Phone number listed (+91 98207 78296).
Domain & Encryption
Server Reputation
Referenced Domains
Outbound domains this page links to or loads resources from. Each links to its own security scan.
What to do
Possible brand impersonation
This page is styled as a known brand but is not the brand's real site.
- Treat trello.events as unverified
Do not enter credentials or send money until you have independently verified the business.
- Go to the brand's real site directly
Type the brand name into a search engine or open it from your bookmarks — don't use links from emails, SMS, ads, or social posts, which are the delivery vectors for impersonation.
- Never download or sign in here
Even if the page "just" offers a download or a giveaway, impersonation pages frequently deliver malware or set up follow-up phishing. Assume anything accepted from this site is hostile.
- OpenReport the impersonation to the brand
Most major brands have a dedicated abuse or anti-phishing reporting channel — reporting helps them take the site down and protects other users.
Final Verdict
The site presents itself as an event-planning business called Trello Entertainment. The domain is a typosquat of the well-known project-management platform Trello and is not an official Atlassian property.
Safety FAQ
Common questions, answered directly from the scan data above — so the answers always reflect the latest verdict on this page.
- trello.events looks like a likely brand impersonation — do not enter your login or personal details. Our review tagged it for clone site. It may not be an outright scam, but the risk is high enough that you should verify it independently before trusting it with money or data.
- Proceed with caution — trello.events scores 55/100 on our trust scale. We found enough warning signals to recommend verifying it through independent channels before entering credentials or money.
- If you've already paid or handed over details on trello.events, act quickly. 1) Contact your bank or card issuer immediately and ask to dispute the charge or open a chargeback — the sooner you act, the better your odds. 2) Report the site to the U.S. FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or the FBI's IC3 at ic3.gov, and in the UK to Action Fraud at actionfraud.police.uk. 3) If you entered a password, change it on trello.events and anywhere you reused it, and turn on two-factor authentication. 4) Watch your bank and email for follow-up fraud, and keep screenshots as evidence.
- Often yes, if you act fast. Payments made by credit or debit card can frequently be reversed through a chargeback or dispute — contact your bank right away and explain it was a fraudulent site. Bank transfers and gift-card or voucher payments are much harder to recover, but you should still report them to your bank and to the FTC (reportfraud.ftc.gov) or Action Fraud (actionfraud.police.uk). Avoid any "refund" or "recovery" service that contacts you first — it's usually a follow-up scam.
- If you entered anything on trello.events, assume it was captured. Phishing pages exist purely to harvest what you type — usernames, passwords, card numbers, or one-time codes. Change the password immediately on the real site and anywhere you reused it, enable two-factor authentication, and if you entered card or banking details, contact your bank about the risk of fraud. Also be alert for follow-up "security" calls or emails that try to exploit the same information.
- You can report trello.events through several official channels: the U.S. FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov, and — in the UK — Action Fraud at actionfraud.police.uk. You can also flag it to Google Safe Browsing (safebrowsing.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish) so other browsers warn about it, and report it to the company being impersonated if there is one. Reporting helps get scam sites taken down faster.
- Modern scams are built to look convincing. A valid SSL padlock, a polished template, stock photos, fake reviews, and a trust badge can all be added in minutes and prove nothing about who runs the site. Scammers buy cheap domains, clone real designs, and copy legal pages wholesale. That's exactly why an automated review that checks the domain's age, hosting, blacklists, and behaviour — rather than just how the page looks — is more reliable than a first impression.
- No — all 92 antivirus and blocklist engines in our malware network currently report trello.events as clean. That's a good sign, though antivirus coverage is only one of the many signals we weigh, and brand-new scam sites can appear clean before vendors catch up.
- No — trello.events is not currently on the major browser blocklist feeds that Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge rely on. Note that blocklists can lag behind brand-new scam domains, so "not listed" is reassuring but not a guarantee on its own.
- Yes — trello.events presents a valid TLSv1.2 certificate issued by Sectigo Limited · Sectigo Public Server Authentication CA DV R36, valid for another 79 days. Important caveat: SSL only encrypts the connection between you and the site — it does not verify who runs it. Almost all scam sites now have valid SSL too, so a padlock alone never means "safe".
- trello.events resolves to an IP operated by Virtual Private Hosting Service in SG (Data Center/Web Hosting/Transit). Hosting location alone doesn't make a site good or bad — but hosting that doesn't match a brand's claimed country, or that sits on networks known for abuse, is one of the many signals we weigh alongside the verdict above.
- This report is a record of the scan run on July 15, 2026, and the verdict reflects that point in time. Scam sites change fast — they can go live, get flagged, or vanish within days — so if you believe something about trello.events has changed, MalwareTips staff can run a fresh scan that re-checks every signal from scratch and republishes an updated verdict.
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