✅ What is Lingojam — and which domains are “official”
- The more established and widely known version of LingoJam runs under lingojam.com (and related domains). Their site description: “Make a Translator Online!” — i.e. the online tool for creating custom translators / fancy‑text / font‑style conversions. (lingojam.com)
- On lingojam.com there is a Privacy Policy page describing what data is collected (if any), how cookies/logs work, user rights under GDPR/CCPA, etc. (lingojam.com/privacy)
- That suggests lingojam.com is the “official” functioning site for LingoJam’s tools.
🔎 What about lingojam.org?
- According to domain‑lookup data, “lingojam.org” was registered in September 2023. (ipaddress.com)
- The domain’s WHOIS and IP‑address listing shows it's currently “for sale / parked” (i.e. domain‑parking), meaning it doesn’t look like a developed, functioning website. (ipaddress.com)
- On the public “review/safety” pages for lingojam.org, its “reputation / trustworthiness / privacy / child safety” status is described as “Unknown” — there’s insufficient data or user feedback to confirm it’s a legitimate site. (review.easycounter.com)
- Because of that — “unknown” status, parked domain, no clear privacy or terms pages — there’s no trustworthy sign that lingojam.org is a functioning version of LingoJam (or under control of the same owners as the official site).
⚠️ Conclusion: lingojam.org should be considered unreliable / uncertain
Given the evidence:
- It appears “parked / for sale” rather than an active site.
- There’s no accessible, credible Privacy Policy, Terms page or user feedback for lingojam.org.
- Its “reputation / trust / privacy” metadata is “unknown.”
Therefore, you should not treat lingojam.org as the legitimate LingoJam site. If you need to use LingoJam’s tools, going to lingojam.com (or whichever domain is officially maintained) is much safer.
If you like — I can check global domain‑registries (WHOIS) to see if lingojam.org was ever owned by the same entity as lingojam.com.
That could clarify if it was once, or might ever be, “official.”
Do you want me to fetch that now for you?