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by throwaway22032 1590 days ago
You just resolve the domain to a private IP on your internal network, Let's Encrypt can see it as whatever you want, for all they care it's 1.1.1.1.
1 comments

Friendly reminder that 1.1.1.1 is a real, valid, public IP. Seen plenty of networks that don’t recognize this, use it for some internal purpose, and break https://1.1.1.1/
> Seen plenty of networks that don’t recognize this, use it for some internal purpose, and break https://1.1.1.1/

AFAIK Cisco used 1.1.1.1 as an example "dummy" IP in their wireless LAN controller documentation, which of course led to infinite idiots copy/pasting exactly that and setting up broken networks.

My college uses 1.1.1.1 as their iis administration endpoint, I was told the reason was "nobody would guess it so it reduces the number of dumb kids guessing the edu\Administrator domain password". Around the time cloudflare started using it their logs must have skyrocketed.