<…>
Sites like the ones mentioned here don’t just aim for you to download something (normally malware on its own or bundled as part of the installer’s task), but they also may prompt you to provide information that ranges from personal and contact information, login credential, through to crypto mnemonics.
Besides, in general terms, the person that lands on this sort of page may not have a clue that he’s actually on a phishing site, and that is the core danger to begin with. Even if you purposely visit it to take a sneak-peak knowingly, you need to be careful with your browser history and configuration thereafter, since your browser may autofill to the phishing site later on because you has previously visited it (when typing what you think is the proper url).