AntonK
Very Senior Member
Are you in the U.S.? I believe it's (currently) only automatically enabled if it thinks you're in the U.S.
Yes, I'm in the U.S.
Are you in the U.S.? I believe it's (currently) only automatically enabled if it thinks you're in the U.S.
If I turn DoH on then network.trr.mode gets set to 2. With it off, the value is 0. The network.trr.max-fails value does not change. It stays 5. Don't need to go into about:config to change it. Just go to Options -> General -> Network Settings button and look for the checkbox at the bottom. Screenshot: https://i.imgur.com/CA35fAr.png
Interesting. I turned it on and Imgur would not load.
My FF installation has never shown the DNS over HTTPS setting checked to on. Are you saying that even though it's not checked, it STILL is on under the hood?
3) DoH would just go away and die
Technologies like DoH are just poorly engineered workarounds, and their supporters fail to point out the side-effects caused by their implementation of the technology.
DoH is currently supported and preferred by Chrome, Firefox and Curl. That is support from basically everybody that matters for nearly all platforms. The only notable exception is Apple, but they often lag with new standards.
DoH is going nowhere anytime soon. I expect the shift to DoH for most https users in the world to be rapid and complete within 12 months.
ArsTechnica ran an intersting story this morning about Mozilla and Firefox's DoH implementation. It looks like DoH is here to stay and will be default in future releases, but it will also allow for manual override to DoT and detection of parental control filters etc.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy...ad-confusion-about-encrypted-dns-mozilla-says
ArsTechnica ran an intersting story this morning about Mozilla and Firefox's DoH implementation. It looks like DoH is here to stay and will be default in future releases, but it will also allow for manual override to DoT and detection of parental control filters etc.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy...ad-confusion-about-encrypted-dns-mozilla-says
Now DoH is REALLY uncool now that Microsoft is planning to adopt it in Windows...
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/ne...t-is-adding-dns-over-https-doh-to-windows-10/
Now DoH is REALLY uncool now that Microsoft is planning to adopt it in Windows...
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/ne...t-is-adding-dns-over-https-doh-to-windows-10/
I don't see how all the Enterprise customers will stand for the potential loss of DNS control within corporate networks. They have strong-armed Microsoft to keep supporting old OSes for years beyond belief. Hopefully they'll have the same clout to ensure it doesn't become more of a free-for-all than DoH already is.WTF is wrong with these people... DNS over TLS is what should be implemented at a resolver level. DoH is an application level hack.
Sounds like just another "me too" decision.
"me too" has been Microsoft's strategy in every aspect of their business for many years now IMHO. Every time they've tried to "lead" they've shot themselves in the foot. So now they just copy their competitors hoping for a slice of that pie.Sounds like just another "me too" decision.
They won't. And to be fair I think it more or less says so in that article: "We believe device administrators have the right to control where their DNS traffic goes." In a business/enterprise scenario the "administrator" is the IT department and the end user doesn't have the ability to change their DNS settings.I don't see how all the Enterprise customers will stand for the potential loss of DNS control within corporate networks.
I don't see how all the Enterprise customers will stand for the potential loss of DNS control within corporate networks. They have strong-armed Microsoft to keep supporting old OSes for years beyond belief. Hopefully they'll have the same clout to ensure it doesn't become more of a free-for-all than DoH already is.
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