Enable This Setting on EVERY Web Browser

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Published 2021-05-26
Did you know about this feature?
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Links:
• DNS Test 1 ⇨ www.cloudflare.com/ssl/encrypted-sni/
• DNS Test 2 ⇨ https://1.1.1.1/help
• Configuration Profiles: github.com/paulmillr/encrypted-dns

▼ Time Stamps: ▼
0:00 - Intro
2:59 - Before Getting Started
3:44 - Enabling on Web Browsers
4:56 - On Android
6:32 - On iPhone & iPad
9:35 - On Mac
10:35 - On Windows
11:13 - What is ESNI & ECH?

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All Comments (21)
  • @KiickrOcksz
    He's so powerful. He can slide buttons with his fingers no mouse required.
  • @TheGoldenBat
    Thank you for splitting the spands of the video up to different chapters, this makes it allot easier.
  • @slindebe
    A few comments: 1. DNS lookups should preferably be done by the network stack in the operating system, not by the application, such as a browser. It might cause that different applications on your computer to connect to different IPs for the same site due to different IPs being returned by the DNS used by the browser and the DNS used by the OS. 2. So your ISP can't just look at your secure DNS requests to see what sites you're connecting to, but instead, Cloudflare gets to see all DNS your requests, so who to trust? 3. Some companies/organizations etc, use special domains and/or names for internal resources that are not resolvable by an external DNS provider like Cloudflare, so you might no be able to access them. Cloudflare's main business is hosting sites and data for other companies, accessible with high performance and protection from DDoS attacks globally. Using dynamic DNS resolvers that map a name to different IP addresses based on network and system load, your location, location of data needed to serve your request, and so on, is an important part of that service. Might they have additional motives to see as many DNS requests as possible? Let's say Bank A is a Cloudflare customer, would they be willing to pay for data on DNS requests for Bank B from a certain region for example? Of course, they would! I'm not saying that Cloudflare does it today, but we all know that there is immense value in data regarding customer behavior.
  • @smft9147
    who else misses the poll feature lol, I remember all his videos had a stupid poll at the beginning...
  • @mikeeleren9816
    been using private dns a year already, so far so good it also improves my connection
  • @wvcaver774
    been doing DNS over TLS for a while at the router level
  • @wizdude
    Reason number 3: some countries like Australia have “metadata logging laws” where your ISP logs headers of your traffic and thus knows which websites you are visiting when you make requests via standard unencrypted DNS. If the DNS lookup is encrypted then this makes it harder for a third party (government, law enforcement etc) to track your browsing activities.
  • Bro I am one of your old subscribers... I always liked each videos of yours. Always learnt something new! You are so easy to understand. Massive respect.
  • @maineglass8104
    Very good cursory discussion on the why this information is important. The browser demonstrations that you provided were easy to follow. Love that this video was short and got to the point.
  • @UpStreamCharlie
    Thank you very much for this video. I learned a lot today. It's a good thing I have a new Samsung. I followed your instruction for it. Thanks, ThioJoe.
  • @Pedro5antos_
    Great, great tips! I had never heard of it, thanks Joe
  • @anshulhedau10
    Me: So many work to do. ThioJoe: *new video*. Me: watches video anyway 😁.
  • I love the way he tries to dumb things down so even I can understand them. It didn't work, but I still appreciate the effort.
  • thiojoe thank you for teaching us really good tips for windows! cant wait to see u get 3m subs!
  • @Harvestersz
    I do this the most secure method: I handwrite each DNS request, put it in an envelope, mail it, and wait for the reply.
  • @ksriharsha2911
    The best youtube channel.....thanks joe for sharing valuable knowledge :)
  • @Kaushtav14
    Nice vid. It was very helpful. Thanks 👍🏻👍🏻
  • @barradarcy
    Thank you, your videos are always so informative! Unfortunatly I came across this one too late as esni has been pulled from Firefox-esr and replaced with something else (which seems to be incomplete). There's now no protection for SNI....unless you know something I don't and I'm pretty sure you DO! 🙂