MetaCert Partners

Move beyond awareness campaigns to fraud prevention.

A tall city building with a large billboard that reads “Be careful of suspicious links. #Anti-Fraud.”

If your app or website carries warnings about fake SMS messages, QR codes, or emails, there’s now a better way.

It’s time to stop allocating time and resources to supporting customers who fall for scams. And it’s time to move beyond “be careful of suspicious links” with an approach that’s reliable and dependable.

MetaCert’s new approach makes it simple for banks, payment providers, mobile operators, and tech companies to protect customers from phishing-led scams, account takeovers, and data breaches across every mobile channel.

MetaCert Partners

Move beyond awareness campaigns to fraud prevention.

If your app or website carries warnings about fake SMS messages, QR codes, or emails, there’s now a better way.

It’s time to stop allocating time and resources to supporting customers who fall for scams. And it's time to move beyond “be careful of suspicious links” with an approach that’s reliable and dependable.

MetaCert's new approach makes it simple for banks, payment providers, mobile operators, and tech companies to protect customers from phishing-led scams, account takeovers, and data breaches across every mobile channel.

A tall city building with a large billboard that reads “Be careful of suspicious links. #Anti-Fraud.”
T-Mobile phishing text messages shown on an iPhone screen.

People are told to “watch out for suspicious links” - but what does that actually mean?

This is a real screenshot from a T-Mobile customer’s phone. But every message has a different link:

  • secure.t-mobile.com
  • t-mo.co
  • www.t-mobile.com
  • t-mobile.com
  • secure.t-mobile.com/Pay10
  • t-mo.co/questions
  • secure.t-mobile.com/AccountActivity3

Which of these is legitimate? All of them? Some of them?

90% of fraud, account takeovers, and data breaches start with phishing because conventional security and AI is unreliable.

Can you tell if this Amazon Prime email is real? Hovering over links isn’t reliable. They often look so legitimate you can’t tell the difference.

Every security system on earth will treat this phishing email as safe until someone reports it. By then, the damage is done.

Other security tools also treat payment requests, text messages, login pages, and apps as safe by default. They only react after harm is caused or danger is found by chance.

Screenshot of an Amazon Prime renewal reminder email displayed on an iPhone.

People are told to “watch out for suspicious links” - but what does that actually mean?​

T-Mobile phishing text messages shown on an iPhone screen.

This is a real screenshot from a T-Mobile customer’s phone. But every message has a different link:

  • secure.t-mobile.com
  • t-mo.co
  • www.t-mobile.com
  • t-mobile.com
  • secure.t-mobile.com/Pay10
  • t-mo.co/questions
  • secure.t-mobile.com/AccountActivity3

Which of these is legitimate? All of them? Some of them?

90% of fraud, account takeovers, and data breaches start with phishing because conventional security and AI is unreliable.​

Screenshot of an Amazon Prime renewal reminder email displayed on an iPhone.

Can you tell if this Amazon Prime email is real? Hovering over links isn’t reliable. They often look so legitimate you can’t tell the difference.

Every security system on earth will treat this phishing email as safe until someone reports it. By then, the damage is done.

Other security tools also treat payment requests, text messages, login pages, and apps as safe by default. They only react after harm is caused or danger is found by chance.

Giving people advice isn't enough

It's time to go beyond advice and make it easy for people to verify what's safe.

Cybercrime is projected to surge from $1 trillion to $15 trillion by 2029 because phishing protection isn’t reliable.

It’s time to stop telling people to “be careful with suspicious links” and start using an approach that’s effective and dependable.

Giving people advice is no longer enough

It's time to go beyond advice and make it easy for people to verify what's safe.

Telling people to avoid suspicious links isn’t going to change the trajectory of cybercrime. 

Cybercrime is projected to surge from $1 trillion to $15 trillion by 2029 because phishing protection isn’t reliable.

It’s time to stop telling people to “be careful with suspicious links” and start using an approach that’s effective and dependable.

T-Mobile phishing text messages shown on an iPhone screen.

People are told to “watch out for suspicious links” - but what does that actually mean?

This is a real screenshot from a T-Mobile customer’s phone. Every message is legitimate. But every message has a different link:

  • secure.t-mobile.com
  • t-mo.co
  • www.t-mobile.com
  • t-mobile.com
  • secure.t-mobile.com/Pay10
  • t-mo.co/questions
  • secure.t-mobile.com/AccountActivity3

Which of these is legitimate? All of them? Some of them? None

Welcome to the first major upgrade to phishing protection in 20 years.

Designed for banks, payment companies, mobile network operators, crypto platforms, systems integrators, and security vendors.

This new approach, called Zero Trust for phishing protection, is the innovation that won the top award at Sibos this year. Instead of trying to detect scams that haven’t been reported, MetaCert allows customers to confirm when links are verified as legitimate.

We proved this model in crypto, where over 250,000 people have been protected and not a single person or company has fallen for a phishing scam.

Built on that foundation is Link Verifier – available as a white-label app, a resale product, or through an API for direct integration into your existing app.

By integrating MetaCert into your own app, every end-user can instantly see whether a link has been verified, left unverified, or flagged as dangerous. Link Verifier lives inside the same share menu people already use to copy or open links, making protection feel familiar and effortless.

Welcome to the first major upgrade to phishing protection in 20 years.​

Designed for banks, payment companies, mobile network operators, crypto platforms, systems integrators, and security vendors.

This new approach, called Zero Trust for phishing protection, is the innovation that won the top award at Sibos this year. Instead of trying to detect scams that haven’t been reported, MetaCert allows customers to confirm when links are verified as legitimate.

We proved this model in crypto, where over 250,000 people have been protected and not a single person or company has fallen for a phishing scam.

Built on that foundation is Link Verifier – available as a white-label app, a resale product, or through an API for direct integration into your existing app.

By integrating MetaCert into your own app, every end-user can instantly see whether a link has been verified, left unverified, or flagged as dangerous. Link Verifier lives inside the same share menu people already use to copy or open links, making protection feel familiar and effortless.

Johan Mackie

Johan Mackie, Founder and CEO

Mackie Mobile

At Mackie Mobile, our mission is to protect Americans with the same integrity and commitment I applied during two decades in humanitarian, military, and diplomatic service. When we examined today’s mobile landscape, we saw an uncomfortable truth: people trust their carriers to keep them safe, yet the most personal communication channels such as SMS, QR codes, and mobile apps remain wide open to the same cyber threats that lead to fraud, ransomware, espionage, identity theft, and account takeovers.

That’s why we partnered with MetaCert. Their Link Verifier introduces the first Zero Trust security model for mobile. One simple API integration that protects people across every digital channel including text messages, browsers, QR codes, email, and in-app links. It prevents dangerous links from tricking people and allows instant confirmation of whether a website or request is verified as legitimate.

This technology is easily embedded directly into the Mackie Mobile app and fully branded, giving all our business customers and high-profile subscribers the first true Zero Trust mobile protection in the United States. Together, Mackie Mobile and MetaCert are redefining what it means to be a trusted carrier, one that protects every interaction and every connection.

Partner with MetaCert to protect customers and grow revenue.

By integrating MetaCert into your app, anyone can instantly see whether links are verified, unverified, or flagged as dangerous. Link Verifier sits inside the same share menu they already use to copy or open links in a browser.

Banks & Payment Providers

Cut fraud costs, improve regulatory confidence, and rebuild customer trust in digital payments. Link Verifier helps you to prove to regulators that you did everything possible to protect customer from fraud.

Get in touch

Mobile Network Operators

Give business customers and subscribers a reason to stay loyal and choose you over others. Increase ARPU, improve retention, and enhance brand reputation by helping customers feel safer every time they receive an SMS or open a link inside email, apps, and browsers.

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eSIM Providers

Stand out from the abundance of new competitors hitting the market by giving customers peace of mind wherever they go. Strengthen your value proposition and make safety part of your brand promise.

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Security Vendors

Add a new layer of credibility to your product portfolio by giving clients Zero Trust for phishing protection. Move from reactive to preventative security and expand your competitive edge.

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Crypto Companies

Give traders and investors confidence that every link and payment related interaction is legitimate. Reduce fraud claims, protect brand integrity, and strengthen customer trust where it matters most.

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Systems Integrators

Help your clients strengthen customer trust and brand reputation with seamless, built-in protection. Add lasting value to every project without extra complexity.

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