pimpandhost.com
Category: Image Hosting
Detailed link, domain and iframe URLs from this site are not shown here - some of the strings contain content that isn't appropriate for general-audience display. The counts above reflect the full scan.
Description of pimpandhost.com
pimpandhost.com appears to be an image-hosting and photo-sharing platform. Based on the page title, metadata, and homepage layout, the service lets users upload images, share them on websites, blogs, and forums, and browse posted content through sections such as Explore, Posts, and Forum.
The domain has been registered since 2006, which suggests it is a long-running web service rather than a newly created site. The operator is not explicitly identified in the provided scan data, but the site presents itself as a standalone hosting platform with free uploads and optional premium features.
Safety Assessment for pimpandhost.com
The available scan results are broadly clean at the time of this scan. No detections were reported by 0 out of 91 security engines, the malware scan did not flag any files, and the checked blacklist and threat-database entries were reported as clean. The domain is also relatively old, which can modestly reduce the likelihood of it being a throwaway malicious site.
That said, image-hosting platforms can sometimes contain user-uploaded material that varies over time, so a clean domain-level scan does not guarantee that every hosted file or page will always be benign or suitable for all audiences. The homepage itself does not show obvious phishing or scam indicators in the provided screenshot.
Based on available data, no threats were detected at the time of this scan.
Technical Description
The site is served through Cloudflare infrastructure and resolves to an IP associated with Cloudflare, with nameservers also hosted there. It uses a valid SSL/TLS certificate issued by a major certificate authority, with the certificate shown as valid until 2026-07-04. This indicates that encrypted HTTPS access is in place at the time of testing.
DNSSEC appears to be unsigned, which is not uncommon but means DNS responses do not benefit from that additional integrity layer. No major technical security issues were evident from the provided scan summary, although the exact supported TLS protocol details were not available in the scan data.
Share your experience with this website. Was it safe? Did you encounter any issues?