On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 11:09 AM, Mark Tinka <mark.tinka@seacom.mu> wrote:
On 11/Nov/15 18:03, Christopher Morrow wrote:
it's in wikipedia, so ... someone did :) But yea, don't use dns servers that lie to you UNLESS you understand very well what that lie is going to be and under what conditions you'll get the lie.
Well, there is a ton of them offering pay-for services online that seem to work for millions of people globally.
I suppose those folk are okay with the "lies" those resolvers tell - but there is a specific use-case for those, as you may know...
Yes, people also jump out of perfectly good airplanes... we can't fix all the things :( my point really is you assume some risk when you do odd things with basic plumbing on the internet, if you don't actually know what you are doing you're going to get burned. Quoted from Wikipedia: "Dangers of Use[edit] The dangers of using an unknown IP as a Smart DNS are similar to any other rogue DNS server preforming DNS hijacking in that the user is not aware which parts of his traffic are redirect and intercepted." -chris