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ThreatPhishing & impersonation

Supply-chain BEC — brand impersonation with payment language

supply-chain-vendor-impersonation

What this tier means

High-confidence threat indicator — phishing, impersonation, BEC, or scam pattern. Strong contributor to the trash decision.

How Gorganizer detects this

Display name impersonates a trusted vendor/brand (PayPal, Microsoft, Stripe, etc.) but the sender domain is completely unrelated, AND the body contains invoice/payment language (wire transfer, bank details, invoice, routing number, etc.). This is the signature of a supply-chain BEC attack — the victim believes they are paying a real vendor but the payment goes to the attacker. Only fires when the body contains payment context, distinguishing it from generic display-name spoofing.

False-positive guard

Every signal in Gorganizer feeds a multi-module score — never a sole verdict. This is a threat-tier signal — it adds a strong contribution to the trash score. The full pipeline still requires convergence across multiple modules + a margin over the safety floor before deletion happens, and Gmail's trash (30-day recovery) is always used — never permanent delete.

About the scoring engine

Gorganizer's scoring engine emits over 1,800 signals across six modules — headers, sender, subject, body, attachments, and structural metadata. Every email is scored by every module independently; the final verdict requires multiple modules to agree and the trash score to beat the safety floor by a margin.

Sacred safety guards — never delete starred emails, replies, calendar invites, receipts/invoices, or attachments — apply unconditionally regardless of any signal.

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