This letter from the US service provider industry is quite something. It talks about "data competition" which implies people's data are a legit thing to sell. They also note that encrypting DNS would harm the advertising business. This is why we do not trust the US industry.https://twitter.com/BoingBoing/status/1181206454281396224 …
Absolutely not, this is just about choosing safe defaults. Nobody is suggesting you shouldn't be allowed to choose who is trustworthy. If you're lucky enough to only ever use trustworthy networks, great! Many people are not that lucky, and we should help them, right?
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As long as you define yourself as trustworthy, this is fine advice. Or in the words of a wise former coworker of yours: “I trust me; why shouldn’t everyone else trust me too?”
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Do you agree that the customers of the ISPs in the article you posted yesterday are getting a pretty bad deal? I understand some of those ISPs are probably PowerDNS customers, and you might not want to criticise them, but just in general? https://twitter.com/PowerDNS_Bert/status/1181212034878361601 …
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I agree that apps can already circumvent DNS blocklists in numerous other ways, so I'd rather be interested in making that more difficult, and certainly not the default. This massively complicates maintaining control over DNS.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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