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Your loss
this dns.. too good to be joke..
anyway @kbap, you are me and "k" more...
It was a bit pretentious of them to start the trend, but I see their logic.
I think open nic may be better regarding privacy (not recording browsing habits of the users like google does and probably cloudflare will do)
cool
why
9 is a very good number. It has the power of dragons. I love dragons.
what kind of dragon?
ibm is in 9.9.9.9 involved, can't be good
Sorry for offtopicness (new word Webster 2018 edition) but what does your typical cloudflare plan look like for you guys? If my server provider has DDoS protection what would cloudflare still do for me?
Masking your origin servers, and probably a faster DNS service.
Performance. That's Cloudflare's main selling point; they cache and serve static content through a (very good) CDN.
CloudFlare has many features besides the base web protection. Analytics, DNSSEC, IP/web firewall, mobile redirects, and so on.
A bad one. Called Trent.
Interesting .
I just wonder when 2.2.2.2, 3.3.3.3... will come out? And who sell or hold them?
whois?
The last two ones.. Maybe not a possibility
Level3 / CenturyLink already has public DNS servers on 4.2.2.1 through 4.2.2.4.
No, the Level3 / CentryLink public DNS servers is 209.244.0.3 and 209.244.0.4 - the 4.2.2.1 to 4.2.2.6 shouldn't be used - consider reading https://www.tummy.com/articles/famous-dns-server/
Sure you can use them, but it's not really their official public DNS servers
Some namebench results.
DigitalOcean - London, UK against Alexa
LoveServers - Manchester, UK against Alexa
DigitalOcean - London, UK against my own list
LoveServers - Manchester, UK against my own list
I did not know that history, thanks for the links!
I tend to rely on DNS.Watch and OpenNIC, myself.
and the blogpost https://blog.cloudflare.com/announcing-1111/
Its live on DNSPerf as well https://www.dnsperf.com/#!dns-resolvers
what shall I do
Ah heck, I see you're still living in a datacenter - hope things get better.
1 thank = 1 prayer
Oh wow.... I'm only a hop away from them... If I opted for fibre service in my house (but no difference in speed...), this would be at 1ms!
Funny that it doesn't pass my provider's internal routing with a internal IP address, wonder if they set themselves up a PoP at my provider.
They announced it on twitter several hours ago
What happens when you try to go to: http://1.1.1.1 at your provider?
So, I decided to check out their DNS over HTTP/s (DoH) and saw an example and tried it out.
Got a very interesting data snippet back: http://xkcd.com/1361/.
At least they have a nice sense of humor. Plus 4 1's on 4/1 is really catchy.
I had a nice laugh.