Typing "danlwd" on Arabic keyboard (physical keys labeled with Arabic but OS set to Arabic, and you press the keys that produce those English letters in QWERTY) gives: د (d) + ش (a) + ن (n) + ل (l) + و (w) + د (d) = "دشنل ود" — not common. So maybe the reverse: The user intended to type Arabic but had English layout active. Then to decode, set keyboard to English and type the same keys.
Alternatively, it could be or simple substitution, but let's test the keyboard hypothesis: danlwd gyty wy py an ba lynk mstqym
For example, if you type the phrase on a standard while intending to type English letters, you get a meaningful sentence. Typing "danlwd" on Arabic keyboard (physical keys labeled
Typing "danlwd gyty wy py an ba lynk mstqym" on an Arabic keyboard (with English output) — actually, the common trick: If you have an Arabic keyboard layout and you type an English-looking word, you get Arabic. So reverse: Take each English letter, see which Arabic letter it corresponds to on the standard Arabic keyboard (which follows the QWERTY order but with Arabic letters). Alternatively, it could be or simple substitution, but
But given the context of your request "provide content related to..." — I suspect this is actually a using English letters. Let me try a simpler approach: It might be a Caesar or Atbash cipher: Atbash (A↔Z, B↔Y, etc.): d→w, a→z, n→m, l→o, w→d, d→w → "wzmod" — no.