To answer your deleted tweet: surfing had slowed to treacle. She is off borrowed WiFi on a minor Italian ISP. The ISP's DNS do an excellent job, DoH failed to resolve fast enough. Was convinced her laptop was the issue and about to fork out for a new one.
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In the EU with the GDPR it would be most unwise to log all DNS requests from customers without reason and without consent. Once the request is then made by the ISP's DNS it is then one amongst a multitude providing privacy. DoH providers are US-based. Bad start…
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Three things, I'm European and I use encrypted protocols. DoH is just a protocol, you can use it with both nodes in Europe if that makes you happy. Thirdly, see this tweet, major providers already do comply with GPDR and Privacy Shield, so non-issue
https://twitter.com/eastdakota/status/1181620950653181952 … - 6 more replies
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how about : dns => dns over tls ?
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Sure, it's a straight upgrade from DNS. The issue is it's also easy to block, so it's a reasonable concern that snoopers will just block it and force everyone to downgrade to DNS. DoH is very difficult to block without permission.
End of conversation
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