Recap · verify before you value
Verification Files

Brasssmile.com: Verification File — What the Registries Show

By Ruslana · July 16, 2026 · Updated July 16, 2026

Searching for brasssmile.com? This Verification File answers the one question our registries can settle: is it any kind of investment platform, and does any financial regulator know it exists? Live scan below, reading follows.

OUT OFSCOPEPLATFORM VERIFIER

brasssmile.com

No registry records — neutral unless the site offers investments

No records in the databases checked. For a non-financial site this is expected. For anything taking deposits or promising returns, unregistered + soliciting = walk away.

Checked: 2026-07-16 18:16 UTC · sources named on each card · cached 12h
RDAP · registry

Domain age

2023-03-05
3.4 years — fraud platforms cluster under 1 year
PASS
Wayback Machine

Earliest snapshot

None found
No archive history — very new, or blocked from crawling
WATCH
DNS-over-HTTPS

Mail (MX) configured

No
No mail setup — thin-operation signal
WATCH
SEC IAPD

Investment adviser records

No record
Neutral for non-financial sites; disqualifying for a site claiming to be a US adviser
NO RECORD
FINRA BrokerCheck

Broker-dealer records

No record
Neutral unless the site claims to be a US broker
NO RECORD
SEC EDGAR

Filings mentioning name

None found
No EDGAR filings reference this name
NO RECORD
FCA Register

UK authorization

Not configured
Add RECAP_FCA_KEY in wp-config.php (free key from register.fca.org.uk) to enable UK checks
SETUP

What Brasssmile.com actually is

Brasssmile.com is a multi-niche blog spanning dental, business, finance and lifestyle topics — the dental-sounding name notwithstanding, it is not a dental practice. Its finance-tagged articles are general content, not services: nothing to register, nothing to verify beyond the blog itself.

Reading the registry results

SEC IAPD, FINRA BrokerCheck and SEC EDGAR return what you’d expect for a non-financial site: no records — which here is neutral, not damning. As our methodology explains, empty registries only become a red flag when combined with solicitation: a site with this exact profile that asked for deposits, promised returns, or sold “investment plans” would be disqualified by the same emptiness that’s meaningless here. The domain forensics above (age, archive history, infrastructure) fill in the rest of the picture — re-run them anytime; results refresh from source APIs.

Verdict

Out of scope — not a financial platform. Nothing here to fund, nothing for a regulator to oversee, and nothing in the record suggesting otherwise. If you were checking this name before sending money to something using it, treat that mismatch itself as the finding, and run whatever asked you for the money through the Platform Verifier directly. Absence of records is not an accusation; findings are reported per our standard.