trash
fedilink
@American_Jesus@lemm.ee
link
fedilink
English
2
edit-2
1Y

With plain DNS the ISP can see that you request example.tld to 1.1.1.1

With encrypted DNS (DoT, DoH, DoQ, DNSCrypt…) the requests are encrypted with TLS or other, o only see that you connected to dns.cloudflare.com not the domain that you request, so it cannot see that you requested example.tld

@TiffyBelle@feddit.uk
link
fedilink
English
2
edit-2
1Y

ISPs can always see what domains you visit due to it being leaked in plain text via the SNI portion of the Client Hello sequence of establishing a TLS connection to a web server, whether your DNS requests are encrypted or not.

It’s important to remember that using encrypted DNS does not shield the domains names you visit from your ISP. I feel this is a fundamental misunderstanding that gives some a false sense of privacy. At best, from a privacy perspective, you might avoid DNS-based logging which are slightly more trivial to log than domain taken from SNI.

voxel
link
fedilink
English
11Y

isp can still see the ip, but it’s not as big of an issue as plain domain names (because the default dns logs requests 90% of the time).

@ninchuka@lemmy.one
mod
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11Y

I’m fairly certain that’s not how it works, you’re describing a VPN where your isp routes all traffic to an IP

@American_Jesus@lemm.ee
link
fedilink
English
11Y

Almost, but only for DNS https://heimdalsecurity.com/blog/what-is-encrypted-dns-traffic/

You can also use DNS-over-SSH or DNS-over-TOR, only tunnels the DNS not the whole traffic

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