> On 9 Jan 2022, at 13:11, Jason Vas Dias wrote:
>
> Thanks to all who responded !
> Yes, removing my Forwarders list did the trick .
> Never trust an ISP's DNS servers!
I’m late to the party, but anyway several issues are worth pointing out.
- First, there is no Hidden Google Internet, but G
FTR Jason has been warned before to stop sending this nonsense about Hidden
Google Internet and I’ve put them on the moderation list for now.
Ondřej
--
Ondřej Surý — ISC (He/Him)
My working hours and your working hours may be different. Please do not feel
obligated to reply outside your normal
Am 09.01.22 um 12:57 schrieb Jason Vas Dias:
Thanks Fred -
Though really all I am trying to do is ensure I can access
all public DNS names, which my experience shows me I
cannot, using my ISP's name-servers.
It seems there is a Hidden Google Internet that I cannot access
unles
Thanks to all who responded !
Yes, removing my Forwarders list did the trick .
Never trust an ISP's DNS servers!
Best Regards,
Jason
On 08/01/2022, Jason Vas Dias wrote:
>
> Good day -
>
>I use BIND v9.16.24-1.fc34 on a fully up-to-date Fedora 34
>x86_64 installation as a 'Caching-Only
Thanks, but no one suggested removing my forwarders list .
I figured out that must be the issue, and will try that .
I thought it might be more efficient to use forwarders on my ISP's
network - I see now I should not have .
If someone had simply suggested removing my forwarders, I would
have tried
Thanks Fred -
Though really all I am trying to do is ensure I can access
all public DNS names, which my experience shows me I
cannot, using my ISP's name-servers.
It seems there is a Hidden Google Internet that I cannot access
unless I use Google's DNS servers, giving Google data
abou
Hi there,
On Sat, 8 Jan 2022, Jason wrote:
...
My point is that public service websites, which provide vital
public health services , on which people's lives and human
rights depend , should NOT be on some
"Google Server Accessable Only" Hidden Internet .
And they aren't.
What about non-tec
On Sat, Jan 08, 2022 at 06:10:26PM +,
Jason Vas Dias wrote
a message of 72 lines which said:
> What are "RIPE Atlas Probes" ?
Small boxes that volunteers from all over the world install in various
networks to run active measurements (DNS, ping, traceroute, etc). Very
handy to see the Inte
Am 08.01.22 um 19:26 schrieb Jason Vas Dias:
Yes, of course I can just access the website, now I know the IP
address . That is not the point.
My point is that public service websites, which provide vital
public health services , on which people's lives and human
rights depend , should NOT be
Wow.
1) You're using BIND as a caching nameserver.
So you say. Does the nameserver do its own upstream (authoritative)
lookups? If yes, then the term of art is "recursive / caching"; otherwise
the term is "forwarding".
Looks like you're configuring your ISP's nameservers as forwarders.
Ther
Yes, of course I can just access the website, now I know the IP
address . That is not the point.
My point is that public service websites, which provide vital
public health services , on which people's lives and human
rights depend , should NOT be on some
"Google Server Accessable Only" Hidden Int
Again - it’s your configured forwarders at fault. There’s no Google Hidden
Internet.
Just stop using the forwarders, named is capable to resolve the names on its
own.
Ondřej
--
Ondřej Surý — ISC (He/Him)
My working hours and your working hours may be different. Please do not feel
obligated to
Thank You Stephane, and to all others who responded.
Yes, it appears other users in Ireland have problems accessing this
domain name, not just me - one, who emailed me but not the list,
reports:
> It looks to me like there is indeed something wrong with the setup for
> covid19booster.healthservic
Why not as a stopgap to protect your human rights, use you phone as a hotspot?
Cheaper than suing everyone
Eric
> On Jan 8, 2022, at 11:17, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
>
> On Sat, Jan 08, 2022 at 04:55:24PM +0100,
> Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote
> a message of 52 lines which said:
>
>> This do
On Sat, Jan 08, 2022 at 04:55:24PM +0100,
Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote
a message of 52 lines which said:
> This domain name seems OK for me but I notice that a fair number of
> RIPE Atlas probes in Ireland return a fake NXDOMAIN for this name:
On Twitter, an Irish DNS expert said that it happene
On Sat, Jan 08, 2022 at 03:34:37PM +,
Jason Vas Dias wrote
a message of 146 lines which said:
>"Book An Appointment": https://covid19booster.healthservice.ie/
>
>to make an appointment, Firefox and Chrome both return
>"Server Not Found" errors .
This domain name seems OK for
That’s a question that you need to ask people running these nameservers:
159.134.0.11; 159.134.0.12;
The domain works fine from here and those servers serve only your ISP it seems.
Ondřej
--
Ondřej Surý — ISC (He/Him)
My working hours and your working hours may be different. Please do not feel
Good day -
I use BIND v9.16.24-1.fc34 on a fully up-to-date Fedora 34
x86_64 installation as a 'Caching-Only Nameserver', and
to serve a few local zones ( devices attaching to my
hostapd wireless network for instance ), and to serve
a DNS RPZ zone to direct adware / spyware hosts
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