bshr.ezodn.com appears to be a backend service β the homepage returns a JSON object, not a typical website. That's not inherently suspicious; many tracking, analytics, and ad-tech platforms operate this way. What matters is whether you can trust the company behind it. On the plus side, the site has a proper privacy policy, terms of service, and a legal-entity disclosure (Impressum), which is a baseline requirement for any service that collects data from EU visitors. It's also been online for at least three years and hasn't appeared on any blacklists. The concern is the lack of transparency. The domain owner is hidden behind a private WHOIS registration, and the site offers no obvious contact information on its homepage. For a service that might be embedded in other websites, you have no easy way to reach the operator if something goes wrong. Most legitimate infrastructure companies list at least an email address or support page. Without that, you're trusting a name on a legal document with no direct line of communication. That's the main reason to use caution. If you're a website owner considering using this service, ask for references and verify the company behind the Impressum before integrating it into your site. For casual visitors, there's no immediate danger, but the opacity is a yellow flag that warrants a second look.