so, this happened. @mozillapic.twitter.com/JADDdRS6bS
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| Country | Code | For customers of |
|---|---|---|
| United States | 40404 | (any) |
| Canada | 21212 | (any) |
| United Kingdom | 86444 | Vodafone, Orange, 3, O2 |
| Brazil | 40404 | Nextel, TIM |
| Haiti | 40404 | Digicel, Voila |
| Ireland | 51210 | Vodafone, O2 |
| India | 53000 | Bharti Airtel, Videocon, Reliance |
| Indonesia | 89887 | AXIS, 3, Telkomsel, Indosat, XL Axiata |
| Italy | 4880804 | Wind |
| 3424486444 | Vodafone | |
| » See SMS short codes for other countries | ||
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ISPs really hate DoHhttps://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/11/isps-lied-to-congress-to-spread-confusion-about-encrypted-dns-mozilla-says/ …
any ISP who monetizes their customer DNS traffic via surveillance and interference, is part of the problem. DoH is the wrong solution to that problem (and creates new problems that are worse). GDPR is an example of the right way to keep ISPs on-side with their customers.
What about using DNScrypt locally, to proxy DNS and Tor to various public DNSCrypt/DoH servers? :) What I do now. My ISP sees 0 plain DNS traffic. My DNS recursive servers have no idea who I am (unless they can do NSA level cross-Tor-exits de-anonymisation).
I think the point of DNS privacy is to be easy to deploy. If you encrypt your dns traffic and most people don't then the problem is still there. Their privacy leak is our problem also.
Dnscrypt + Tor is pretty simple to deploy. Correlation of DNS queries and your host is kept private from both ISP and remote recursive resolver. Local ISP just sees encrypted HTTP-like traffic. Don't see the problem?
With Anonymized DNS, Tor is not even required to keep your IP private from remote recursive resolvers. https://github.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-proxy/wiki/Anonymized-DNS …
A DNSCrypt specific form of onion routing, nice. I'll stick with Tor for now, on basis it's more mature for onion routing, but sounds like an option for future.
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