Would just like to interject that changing the DNS server *can* bypass some
types of blocking, including those set in place by many ISPs.
Additionally, while the download speed of a single large file (the arch
iso, for example) may not be sped up, most real-world tests have found that
a DNS server that responds faster can make the web browsing experience
significantly snappier and more responsive.
This is, in part, due to the fact that the internet is not just one large
single file that is downloaded, but many small files, and if the DNS
requests for resolving how to access all of those is slow, you may not
notice an additional 50ms delay for a single file, but you definitely will
for the thousands required to load a standard webpage.

On Wed, 5 Jul 2023 at 11:11, Marcell Meszaros <[email protected]>
wrote:

> The software is suspicious because it is for a purpose that is superfluous
> on Linux, to change the DNS server settings.
>
> And then the website is very marketing-heavy and purports claims that are
> far-fetched and unreasonable.
>
> Turns out, the website is in Persian, with Arabic script. Google Translate
> did not find the language, it set it to English source language.
>
> Translated from Persian by Google translate:
>
>
> "It is an open source software with which users can simply change their
> DNS settings and thus have access to the Internet at a faster and more
> efficient rate"
>
> "
> Features of DNS Changer-Desktop:
>
> Changing Asan DNS is personal - you will also need to change the DNS
> parameters of the system.
>
> Prestibani from a different DNS - There are 3000 different DNS servers.
>
> Without speed limitation - There are no limits to the internet speed, as
> you can find a number.
>
> a dozen guns - With the help of a dozen items, you can quickly press the
> button. Take a quick step.
>
> Sazi character - What you need to know is that the DNS is specialized, so
> that you have enough storage and payments after you use it.
>
> I wish - An application in the form of an open source has became
> widespread, and now there are no security problems that have arisen.
> "
>
>
> My takeaway:
>
> Changing the DNS server does not remove any speed limit on the internet
> connection.
>
> And it has nothing to do with storage or payments.
>
> From Iran, one needs to use a foreign VPN server to access many, otherwise
> completely blocked Western websites and services, like social media. VPN's
> are typically provided for a fee. Changing the DNS server on its own does
> nothing to lift the blocking of affected servers and services.
>
> And VPN is not a DNS-based technology, so a DNS changer application cannot
> create a VPN connection.
>
> Which means these bombastic claims the website is making are still
> suspicious.
>
> On 5 July 2023 07:25:31 GMT+02:00, "é" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >Jul 5, 2023 00:44:53 [email protected]:
> >
> >> zxp19821005 [1] filed a deletion request for dnschanger-bin [2]:
> >>
> >> Suspicious GUI application.
> >> Website and GitHub readme only in Arabic.
> >> And for Linux, changing the DNS server does not need specialized GUI
> >> application binary from untrusted source that uses its own custom-
> >> built Chromium/Electron engine.
> >> And also such an application does not warrant a very nice, shiny, PR-
> >> heavy facade that the website presents.
> >>
> >> [1] https://aur.archlinux.org/account/zxp19821005/
> >> [2] https://aur.archlinux.org/pkgbase/dnschanger-bin/
> >
> >
> >What's actually suspicious to me is your account.
> >
> >You submitted this package yourself on May 17, 2023. Presumably the
> language used by the project maintainers has not changed in the last two
> months, and now you are requesting deletion?
> >
> >First off, the readme is actually entirely in English [3]. Beyond this,
> you presented racist reasoning instead of technical reasons to delete this
> package. The website is in Arabic - and what? There's over 360 million
> native Arabic speakers (dialects notwithstanding).
> >
> >The actual technical reasoning would be at best "0 votes, 0 popularity,
> and I don't use this package that I submitted anymore". Please keep your
> bigotry to yourself.
> >
> >And honestly, I am very suspicious about why you've submitted so many
> -bin packages in the last few months that you are recently requesting
> deletion of...
> >
> >- éclairevoyant
> >
> >[3] https://github.com/DnsChanger/dnsChanger-desktop
>

Reply via email to