Cyber-phishing attacks recently became more precise, targeted, and tailored
by training data to activate only in the presence of specific information or
cues. They are adaptable to a much greater extent than traditional phishing
detection. Hence, automated detection systems cannot always be 100% accurate,
increasing the uncertainty around expected behavior when faced with a potential
phishing email. On the other hand, human-centric defence approaches focus
extensively on user training but face the difficulty of keeping users up to
date with continuously emerging patterns. Therefore, advances in analyzing the
content of an email in novel ways along with summarizing the most pertinent
content to the recipients of emails is a prospective gateway to furthering how
to combat these threats. Addressing this gap, this work leverages
transformer-based machine learning to (i) analyze prospective psychological
triggers, to (ii) detect possible malicious intent, and (iii) create
representative summaries of emails. We then amalgamate this information and
present it to the user to allow them to (i) easily decide whether the email is
"phishy" and (ii) self-learn advanced malicious patterns.