John-Mark Gurney 17dbcfa47d | 5 years ago | |
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privrdns | 5 years ago | |
.gitignore | 5 years ago | |
Makefile | 5 years ago | |
NOTES.md | 5 years ago | |
README.md | 5 years ago | |
requirements.txt | 5 years ago | |
setup.py | 5 years ago |
DNS is currently unsecured, and the IETF have only just started attempting to solve this problem, Signaling That an Authoritative DNS server offers DoT.
DoH doesn’t actually solve the problem, it just centralizes it. Currently most [all] of the DoH providers have not undergone a third party audit, so there is no way to verify their claims that they are not logging or sending data somewhere. Even then, if they receive an NSL or other demand from a government, you will never know about the request. Most companies do not even notify you about a subpoena to let you have the option to quash it, so DoH just centralizes things making it easier for monitoring.
Even when Authoratative DoT is a thing, there will be plenty of domains that will take years, if not decades before it’ll be rolled out.
One solution is to use tor to anonymize the DNS queries. This will only work w/ DNSSEC domains, though there is the option that a voting system could be used, say make 5 queries through different exit nodes, and if any of them disagree, do additional queries to validate the solution.