|
|
|
|
|
by josephcsible
374 days ago
|
|
> But that's the game that most IoT stuff plays. They offer some utility that makes them worthwhile, but they exfiltrate your data to marketeers and even government entities (such as Ring's partnership with law enforcement). Sure. My point is that blocking DoH wouldn't stop that though. > Maybe I'm old-school, but I like to have some control over what's going in and out of my network. What if you were a public Wi-Fi operator? You definitely shouldn't have control or insight into the traffic to and from other people's computers and phones. > DoH seems to exist mainly to circumvent that control. No, DoH is purely a good thing, since the evil use cases like above can happen even without it. |
|