When you land on evn.tdn.gtranslate.net, it looks like a copy of the Wikipedia page for Yerevan, Armenia, but appearances are deceiving. This site has a critical security flaw: its SSL certificate is invalid, which means your browser cannot verify that you are actually connected to the real site. Any information you type or view could be exposed to third parties. For a site that appears to serve content, this is unacceptable.
Beyond the broken security, the person or company behind this domain has gone to lengths to stay anonymous. There is no WHOIS registration record — that's the public directory that normally shows who owns a domain — and the site blocks all search engine crawlers, making it hard to check its history. The Wayback Machine has never archived it, which is unusual for any site that's been online for more than a few days.
The site does have privacy pages and contact information, but those are likely copied from Wikipedia, not provided by the actual operator. With 22 hidden elements on the page and a certificate issued by the site's own company rather than a trusted authority, this setup looks designed to obscure rather than inform. Our verdict is clear: this is a dangerous site. Do not browse it, enter any information, or click any links on it.