right now is good,no problem
@uqe4 You can report Fraud/Abuse by using the support form here:
https://www.netlify.com/support/?topic=Report+Fraud+or+Abuse
Or alternatively the Abuse link on the bottom of the Netlify site:
This, unfortunately, leads to nowhere. The linked e-mail address fraud@netlify.com won’t accept e-mails that contain phishing URLs, which is in breach of internet best practices – see screenshot below.
Mails sent to abuse@netlify.com seem to go unread, all URLs I reported on October 6 are still online.
The form simply is not really suited for reporting abuse, as it asks for “The email associated with your Netlify account” (I don’t have one), but nontheless I gave it a try. Netlify, please look at reporting forms like those set up by AWS, to see how it should be done.
This is a seriously bad abuse handling experience, and this will make abuse of Netlify services even more likely as spammers/scammers/phishers don’t have to fear their pages being taken down.
@mgrobecker Having the email address itself block the report for containing spam/phishing etc does very much defeat the stated purpose of the address.
@hrishikesh See above, I doubt the fraud@ address should be outright rejecting legitimate submissions.
That’s what I mean. But it’s the receipient’s responsibility to disable spam filtering for that address – my sent mail was simply rejected, even when I replaced dots in the URLs with `[.]`.
I’ve sent this request to our helpdesk, and we’ll follow up shortly via email to get this sorted for you. Thank you!
I’m not sure what could have happened here. Maybe Zendesk auto-rejected it or something? I’ll have to check, thanks for flagging!

