Directory.io is not phishing. The chances of someone finding an adress that has ever been used by anyone ever, (aside from people sending coins to the first one for fun) is impossible.
The problem is that some moron can enter his private key there, to see what the site says about it. Then if the owner reads the server logs, he can read the private key. To be clear, never ever never ever never ever put your private key in a random website.
I hope that most morons only know the public address (that is a hash of the public key), and don't know about the private key that is stored in a wallet. In https://www.google.com/search?q=site:Directory.io the numbers are too low, so they are probably only a few random keystrokes, not "real" private keys.
> The problem is that some moron can enter his private key there, to see what the site says about it. Then if the owner reads the server logs, he can read the private key. To be clear, never ever never ever never ever put your private key in a random website.
You would think that the word "private" in "private key" would give them a clue... or do most people now not really understand the concept of privacy anymore?