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by shawnz
2679 days ago
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But why would you care about that? You're already connecting to Google's service, YouTube, so what does it change to use Google's DNS to resolve it? What is the circumstance where you'd care about not using Google's DNS but then connect to a Google service anyway? If Chromecasts allowed arbitrary web browsing, I would maybe see your point -- but they don't. |
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I agree that on a privacy level, hiding DNS requests from Google when your Google Chromecast is calling Youtube seems like closing the stable door after the horse is gone. But there are reasons other than privacy that relying on Google's DNS might go wrong; it can be blocked (or trigger suspicion) by a government, ISPs have occasionally broken their routing to 8.8.8.8 specifically, and Google DNS itself has even had (very rare) outages.
None of those issues are enormously common, except perhaps Turkey's censorship, but they're all totally avoidable. Using 8.8.8.8 as a default and failing over to the user's DNS if necessary seems to be strictly better than this approach from a consumer viewpoint.