When you land on a URL that looks like an AWS load balancer endpoint, it's natural to wonder if you've stumbled onto something legitimate. In this case, sgp-bigdata-obus-nlb-fo-xoejddr-da2e2629288f1ec0.elb.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com is not a functioning website β it's a bare infrastructure hostname. The SSL certificate is issued for a completely different domain (heytapmobile.com), which means either the load balancer was reused for the wrong purpose or someone is pointing a certificate where it doesn't belong. The site itself returns a 404 and displays only the text "domain is not configured." That's a clear sign this hostname isn't serving any real content.
For an infrastructure endpoint, you'd expect to see either a working API or a redirect β neither exists here. There's no web archive history, no contact info, and no way to know who originally set this up. AWS load balancer hostnames are common for backend services, but a valid, matching SSL certificate is the bare minimum for trust. This one fails that test. My advice: treat this hostname as abandoned or misconfigured, and don't try to access it directly. Is sgp-bigdata-obus-nlb-fo-xoejddr-da2e2629288f1ec0.elb.ap-southeast-1.amazonaws.com a scam? Not really β it's more like a digital dead end. But it's certainly not safe to interact with in its current state.