> DoH does not help you at at all if your browser is going to go to an IP that is on a watchlist. That is the author's (and Paul Vixie's point). If that's the aim then I have to concur that DoH does nothing here. This…
I think the VPN vs DoH argument is a fallacy. You could argue the same way for things like telnet vs ssh and it would make just as little sense. In addition a VPN is much more complex than simply using DoH or DoT. DoH…
Isn't this a really odd point? Right now, you can hardly run a public resolver in the traditional sense as UDP resolvers are prone to be used for DNS amplification attacks and TCP isn't supported/configurable on all…
> DoH does not help you at at all if your browser is going to go to an IP that is on a watchlist. That is the author's (and Paul Vixie's point). If that's the aim then I have to concur that DoH does nothing here. This…
I think the VPN vs DoH argument is a fallacy. You could argue the same way for things like telnet vs ssh and it would make just as little sense. In addition a VPN is much more complex than simply using DoH or DoT. DoH…
Isn't this a really odd point? Right now, you can hardly run a public resolver in the traditional sense as UDP resolvers are prone to be used for DNS amplification attacks and TCP isn't supported/configurable on all…