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#dnsprivacy — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #dnsprivacy, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. 🔍 So, you want to choose a public DNS resolver, huh? Just whip out your crystal ball and predict which of the 29 options won’t sell your data or collapse under a stiff breeze. 🌀 Who knew you needed a PhD in "DNS-ology" to pick one? 😅
    evilbit.de/dns-resolver-guide. #DNSResolver #DNSPrivacy #TechHumor #InternetSecurity #DataProtection #HackerNews #ngated

  2. 🔍 So, you want to choose a public DNS resolver, huh? Just whip out your crystal ball and predict which of the 29 options won’t sell your data or collapse under a stiff breeze. 🌀 Who knew you needed a PhD in "DNS-ology" to pick one? 😅
    evilbit.de/dns-resolver-guide. #DNSResolver #DNSPrivacy #TechHumor #InternetSecurity #DataProtection #HackerNews #ngated

  3. Karlsruhe's Constitutional Court suspends controversial DNS surveillance order! Providers challenged mass-monitoring of 40M users' requests—victory for privacy rights. A legal milestone against overreach. ⚖️🔒 heise.de/en/news/Complaint-Kar #DNSPrivacy #DigitalRights #Germany #Newz

  4. Karlsruhe's Constitutional Court suspends controversial DNS surveillance order! Providers challenged mass-monitoring of 40M users' requests—victory for privacy rights. A legal milestone against overreach. ⚖️🔒 heise.de/en/news/Complaint-Kar #DNSPrivacy #DigitalRights #Germany #Newz

  5. Implement DNS over HTTPS/TLS to prevent DNS leaks.

    #DoH #DoT #DNSPrivacy

  6. Mozilla announced their #DNS-over-HTTPS (#DOH) Policy Requirements for DOH servers that want to be listed as Trusted Recursive Resolvers (TRRs) inside of Firefox: blog.mozilla.org/security/2019 #DNSprivacy

  7. We are happy to announce our second privacy enhancing service:

    Today we are launching our DNS Privacy services supporting DNS-over-TLS and DNS-over-HTTPS

    Encrypt all the things, DNS included!

    appliedprivacy.net/posts/dns-p

    #dnsprivacy

  8. @Argus @K Correct. DNS-over-TLS (DoT) means that observers of your local network (including potentially your ISP) can’t see your DNS queries and therefore can’t build a profile of you for surveillance or advertising. Getting DoT widely deployed is part of the ongoing #DNSPrivacy work going on within the #DNS community. See: dnsprivacy.org/wiki/

    There are a good number of others running DoT servers: dnsprivacy.org/wiki/display/DP

    This news by Google is a great endorsement of the technology.