CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service
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@dafyre said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@fuznutz04 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@wls-itguy said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@jaredbusch said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@fuznutz04 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
OK, new project tomorrow. Install Pi-hole finally.
Here is how to add porn blocking.
https://mangolassi.it/topic/16905/add-porn-blocking-to-your-pi-holeSo, combining the Cloudflare DNS and the pi-hole filter is basically like having a firewall with content filtering?
If so, I just upgraded 2 of my Raspberry Pi's here at work. Might have a new project for home with one of the older R-Pis now.
CloudFlare DNS is just DNS, just like any other DNS. However, their focus is on privacy, and they claim that they will not keep or sell your browsing history. Also, from what the stats say, they are much faster than other big DNS servers like 8.8.8.8
Pi-Hole blocks ads/ad domains, but is also capable of blocking specific sites, or site lists.
I'm using a pihole VM (just set it up a couple of nights ago) pointed at CloudFlare. DNS is nice and snappy, that's for sure!
Same here. Exact same setup. I'm just amazed at how much has been block in the past 15 minutes alone.
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@fuznutz04 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@dafyre said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@fuznutz04 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@wls-itguy said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@jaredbusch said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@fuznutz04 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
OK, new project tomorrow. Install Pi-hole finally.
Here is how to add porn blocking.
https://mangolassi.it/topic/16905/add-porn-blocking-to-your-pi-holeSo, combining the Cloudflare DNS and the pi-hole filter is basically like having a firewall with content filtering?
If so, I just upgraded 2 of my Raspberry Pi's here at work. Might have a new project for home with one of the older R-Pis now.
CloudFlare DNS is just DNS, just like any other DNS. However, their focus is on privacy, and they claim that they will not keep or sell your browsing history. Also, from what the stats say, they are much faster than other big DNS servers like 8.8.8.8
Pi-Hole blocks ads/ad domains, but is also capable of blocking specific sites, or site lists.
I'm using a pihole VM (just set it up a couple of nights ago) pointed at CloudFlare. DNS is nice and snappy, that's for sure!
Same here. Exact same setup. I'm just amazed at how much has been block in the past 15 minutes alone.
Yeah, you don't realize how much garbage you are downloading for every little thing until you use Pi-Hole.
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It really does improve your bandwidth usage!
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I used Steve Gibson's DNS Benchmark tool on my network and Cloudflare's DNS servers didn't beat Quad9 by much. May be worth using the tool on your network to verify before switching your DNS. Needless to say, 1.1.1.1 was faster so I switched my pihole to Cloudflare.
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@magicmarker said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
I used Steve Gibson's DNS Benchmark tool on my network and Cloudflare's DNS servers didn't beat Quad9 by much. May be worth using the tool on your network to verify before switching your DNS. Needless to say, 1.1.1.1 was faster so I switched my pihole to Cloudflare.
Eh one is run by the US government the other a fairly well recognized industry vendor.
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@coliver said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@magicmarker said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
I used Steve Gibson's DNS Benchmark tool on my network and Cloudflare's DNS servers didn't beat Quad9 by much. May be worth using the tool on your network to verify before switching your DNS. Needless to say, 1.1.1.1 was faster so I switched my pihole to Cloudflare.
Eh one is run by the US government the other a fairly well recognized industry vendor.
Yeah - no interest in running Quad9 from this side of the screen. Hell I'll take Google DNS over Gov't DNS any day.
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Yeah, Quad9 can go fly a kite.
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@magicmarker said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
I used Steve Gibson's DNS Benchmark tool on my network and Cloudflare's DNS servers didn't beat Quad9 by much. May be worth using the tool on your network to verify before switching your DNS. Needless to say, 1.1.1.1 was faster so I switched my pihole to Cloudflare.
What if we want to test the DNS with other OS like Linux and Mac ? That tool won't do
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@magicmarker said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
I used Steve Gibson's DNS Benchmark tool on my network and Cloudflare's DNS servers didn't beat Quad9 by much. May be worth using the tool on your network to verify before switching your DNS. Needless to say, 1.1.1.1 was faster so I switched my pihole to Cloudflare.
That it is "roughly as fast" is all that we need to want to switch. That it is actually faster, even if only a tiny bit, is just an extra bonus.
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Aaaannnnnddddd it fails already....
Looks like I'm sticking with Google DNS for now.
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@tim_g said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
Aaaannnnnddddd it fails already....
Looks like I'm sticking with Google DNS for now.
Mmm it is working here very fast too.
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@dbeato said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
@tim_g said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
Aaaannnnnddddd it fails already....
Looks like I'm sticking with Google DNS for now.
Mmm it is working here very fast too.
It works for me too.
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Anyone using AT&T having issues using 1.1.1.1? It resolves to CloudFlare, however, ping latency is 1ms and a tracert only has one hop which is the 1.1.1.1. Seems like that IP is assigned to the onsite AT&T modem. Is it even worth trying to explain to an AT&T support rep? Seems like it may be a long phone call with no resolution.
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@i3 Have you tried using the secondary 1.0.0.1 server?
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@i3 said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
Anyone using AT&T having issues using 1.1.1.1? It resolves to CloudFlare, however, ping latency is 1ms and a tracert only has one hop which is the 1.1.1.1. Seems like that IP is assigned to the onsite AT&T modem. Is it even worth trying to explain to an AT&T support rep? Seems like it may be a long phone call with no resolution.
It is also definitely worth phone calls or something because
- It is not a private IP address
- AT&T does not own it
- AT&T is not allowed to steal traffic.
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@jaredbusch said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
- AT&T is not allowed to steal traffic.
If this is on the modem, it's a bit weird as it is local and not at AT&T.
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@i3 Confirmed that AT&T isnβt working correctly.
https://blog.cloudflare.com/fixing-reachability-to-1-1-1-1-globally/
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Why would ATT do this, use a public ip for an internal ip address on their devices? a public ip they dont own or have control over, to boot.
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@momurda said in CloudFlare Launches Privacy First DNS Service:
Why would ATT do this, use a public ip for an internal ip address on their devices? a public ip they dont own or have control over, to boot.
Not for any smart reason. But they did it SO long ago and got away with it for decades so one has to wonder... was it really a bad decision?
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@scottalanmiller Yes i was thinking they did this because this address space was unassigned for 30 years. But what is the purpose? Is unallocated public address space usable in any way?