Pulse (OVH) is already over-used in the Tor network, and very tolerant.
Hostwinds seemed to be fine with it as long as I responded to abuses
quickly. I haven't gotten any abuse on DigitalOcean yet, but they are very
clear that YOU are responsible for any and all abuses. Not sure how far
they'll go
On July 28, 2016 2:50:40 PM EDT, ITechGeek wrote:
>On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 2:34 PM, Tristan
>wrote:
>
>> I really wish VPS services wouldn't use Google DNS by default. If not
>for
>> this e-mail, I would have been on Google's DNS for a while before I
Right now I'm using Digital Ocean, but my previous provider experiences
Hostwinds and Pulse (OVH) also have Google DNS as the default.
On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 1:50 PM, ITechGeek wrote:
>
> On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 2:34 PM, Tristan wrote:
>
>> I
On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 2:34 PM, Tristan wrote:
> I really wish VPS services wouldn't use Google DNS by default. If not for
> this e-mail, I would have been on Google's DNS for a while before I found
> out.
I actually haven't seen that before, what VPS provider do you
I really wish VPS services wouldn't use Google DNS by default. If not for
this e-mail, I would have been on Google's DNS for a while before I found
out.
Maybe the Tor devs could add a warning if an exit is using Google DNS?
Would that be acceptable?
On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 12:59 PM, Toralf
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On 07/28/2016 07:50 PM, nusenu wrote:
> If you run an exit and find your relay fingerprint next to a Google AS
If only a subset from the whole list is meant it would be helpful to provide an
appropriate subset of that file for the purpose of this
phw released some scan data.
If you run an exit and find your relay fingerprint next to a Google AS
name on the list linked below you might want to change your DNS server
settings.
Note this list is based on data from May 2016 (so it does not
necessarily represent the current situation).
Nice software.
But you have to trust the public/open DNSCrypt resolvers ?
Or may be it's possible to build your own resolver, but it has to
resolve DNS queries with DNS roots servers, or another DNS resolver you
will trust?
Humm, the cat chasing its tail
Le 17/05/2016 01:51, Jesse V a écrit :
>