DNS-over-HTTPS causes more problems than it solves, experts say https://www.zdnet.com/article/dns-over-https-causes-more-problems-than-it-solves-experts-say/ …pic.twitter.com/Td8WVxtwVZ
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Vulnerability researcher at Google. This is a personal stream, opinions expressed are mine.
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DNS-over-HTTPS causes more problems than it solves, experts say https://www.zdnet.com/article/dns-over-https-causes-more-problems-than-it-solves-experts-say/ …pic.twitter.com/Td8WVxtwVZ
Seems like the dns loggers are getting worried. Their arguments make zero sense, if they own the endpoints they can just disable it. If they don't own them, but they're certain they add value, then users will opt-in. If neither of those are true, then quit your snooping.
Did you just suggest that I snoop? Also, please feel free to refute https://blog.powerdns.com/2019/09/25/centralised-doh-is-bad-for-privacy-in-2019-and-beyond/ … - people are so far attacking the messenger and not the message.
The article is pretty ridiculous Bert, DoH is a piece of the puzzle, nobody is claiming it is sufficient in isolation.
Feel free to refute it. Because people are selling it like this. Also ponder the glass house you live in - alleging that other people might have the temerity to snoop on internet users!
I think you're deliberately conflating two issues, one is an argument against centralization, and the other is a nonsense argument against DoH. The problem is there needs to be a default, right now that's trust the network administrator (via dhcp options).
That default just plain doesn't work for many users, like free hotel wifi or untrustworthy ISP. DoH, plus a default to an organization that has committed to reasonable privacy policies seems like the best option we have.
If you don't like it, because your ISP has good policies: Just switch? I'm all for default regional-specific providers btw.
Assigning each ISP a region doesn’t seem to work well (see DT, Comcast, FT)
Right, I mean from a vetted list. One of Bert's (valid) concerns is that EU has better privacy protections than the US, so using a US provider for EU citizens seems wrong. A per-region default seems like a good solution to that.
by default a centralised provider is bad for privacy, especially when provider is American, due to simpel access by your TLA agencies
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