When you land on a page that asks for an email passcode, you expect to at least know who you're dealing with. That's not the case here. This site, which appears to be a verification portal, lacks the basic foundation of a legitimate service: no company name, no contact info, no privacy policy. For any site that handles login credentials, those are minimum requirements, not nice-to-haves.
While the domain passed Google's threat scan and uses a current SSL certificate, it still supports outdated TLS versions that have known security flaws. But the bigger problem is anonymity. The domain is a random subdomain on a CDN platform, making it nearly impossible to trace ownership. There are no reviews, no social media presence, and no web archive history to confirm it's been around. Is global-accelerationr3que5f-dpojca32e2u6.edgeone.dev a scam? We can't say for sure, but the warning signs are serious enough that we'd recommend thinking twice before entering any password.