whats special about dnscrypt?
tp link in chinkware?
whats special about dnscrypt?
tp link in chinkware?
>dnscrypt.info
inb4 dnscrypt actually refer to the communication protocol between dns client and dns resolver. Basically it encrypt your dns request. In my case I use dnscrypt because my third world shithole ISP always spoofing my dns request for blocking websites.
1. it works
2. in principle it's much more FOSS than DoT which Cloudflare and other companies are shilling. There's probably nothing wrong with DoT but support for it being so centralized means it's smoke and mirrors. See the Mozilla deal in hardcoding Cloudflare's DNS service into Firefox.
Am I the only one using unbound to host a cache server, that directly query from the root servers?
www. internic. net/domain/named.cache
I always feared using dnscrypt, or any other dns project. The DNS browsing informations are very important.
I don't trust any vpn provider for exemple...
Is that a shit way of doing things? Maybe a better way?
Recursive DNS queries to the actual root servers and all the way to authoritative servers are not encrypted (and probably never will be), meaning your ISP can see your shit.
Other than that, it's better to query DNS recursively, yes.
Unbound with DNSSEC. calomel.org
There are plenty of other resolvers that don't make jewgle or kikeflare aware of every website you visit.
Depends
unbound on 127.0.0.1
ISP don't see shit since I'm behind a VPN. So my problem, is what is better between root servers, or openNIC servers.
Giving your dns infos to openNIC (or another project) or to root servers?
I've set up a DNS cache of 4 hours. Maybe I should turn it even more, maybe days (and if some server changes their ip, I just have to reload the unbound service). So I don't give much infos.
8.8.8.8
I'm all about Zig Forums.