YES comment.
Don't mistake facts for "my personal opinion". Make of this what you will; if you want to click on spurious websites of dubious locale and origin, go right ahead. If you are on a PC instead of Mac, do so with a measure of extra precaution--because you are more vulnerable to attacks of any kind.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/from-russia-with-objective-spam-stats/ That's not from me; that's ZD Net, one of the most respected business technology news sources.
But let's go back to the website that engendered this conversation:
http://topclassiccarsforsale.comIf you want to find out just a little bit more about
any website, simply go here for a report:
https://www.webnames.ca/whoisType in any website that you might find "interesting", and there you may find a telling report...
My initial conclusion, moderated away, is clearly visible in the report. Someone even suggested, without the benefit of facts, that because the website ended in ".com" it couldn't possibly be from a place I suggested.
But run the report and draw your own conclusions. Don't forget to read deep enough into the report to get to contact information, and server addresses and location.
For nice guidelines, a Canadian software expert offers these tips:
https://blog.webnames.ca/how-to-determine-if-a-website-is-a-fake-fraud-or-scam/One might think that [Canadian] software expert David Hall's suggestions are merely common sense; but if they are so common, nobody would ever be scammed.
So: draw your own conclusions. Caveat Emptor. The serious danger to your own cyber security with websites such as this one brought to us by Shvegel, and properly commented on by Tyler S. "That website is a crock of s@#* is that you may be tempted to start clicking around...and once you do that, all bets are off.