Heads up — the easy free way to put an AI-built page online usually makes it public and searchable on Google. Pagelive keeps yours private →

Report abuse

Seen a Pagelive page being used for harm? Tell us.

Pagelive hosts pages people publish themselves. Most are proposals, decks, and demos — but if you’ve found one used for phishing, malware, or fraud, report it and a human will review it.

Email abuse@pagelive.io Include the page URL — that’s all we need.

Scope

What we act on

Our terms prohibit using Pagelive to harm people. In practice, that means:

Phishing & credential theft
Pages imitating a login screen, a brand, or a payment flow to capture credentials or card details.
Malware & exploits
Pages distributing malicious code, drive-by downloads, or links to malware.
Scams & fraud
Investment scams, fake invoices, advance-fee fraud, impersonation of companies or people.
Illegal content
Content that is illegal to host or distribute, including CSAM — reported to the relevant authorities, always.
Spam infrastructure
Pages that exist only as landing targets for unsolicited bulk email or link-laundering.

A page being password-protected doesn’t shield it — if you can see abuse behind a password you received, report it with whatever context you have.

Process

What happens to a report

1

You report it

Email the full page URL and a one-line description. A screenshot helps but isn’t required.

2

We review it

A human looks at the page — typically within hours, not days. Automated scanning runs continuously in the background as well.

3

We act

Confirmed abuse is taken down and the publishing account is suspended. Illegal content is reported to the authorities.

We also run our own defenses — phishing scanning, bot checks on anonymous publishing, rate limits, and domain isolation between anonymous and claimed content. Details in Security.

Report a page now.

One email with the URL is enough. We take it from there.