F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Cloudflare DNS 1.1.1.1

Cloudflare DNS 1.1.1.1

Cloudflare DNS 1.1.1.1

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FreakenGamer
Junior Member
34
10-24-2023, 08:36 PM
#1
Your DNS adjustments by themselves won’t hide your online activity. To achieve anonymity, you’d require a comprehensive VPN that directs your traffic exclusively through their network.
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FreakenGamer
10-24-2023, 08:36 PM #1

Your DNS adjustments by themselves won’t hide your online activity. To achieve anonymity, you’d require a comprehensive VPN that directs your traffic exclusively through their network.

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mooaserti
Member
129
10-24-2023, 11:35 PM
#2
Or just this one.
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mooaserti
10-24-2023, 11:35 PM #2

Or just this one.

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renliff
Member
240
10-26-2023, 01:49 PM
#3
Phentos refers exactly to what you intended. My main follow-up is understanding how Clourdflare DNS handles privacy. I’m still unsure about its specific functions. OrbitalBuzzsaw and Tor are both seen as problematic in my view—they’re overly restrictive for everyday use.
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renliff
10-26-2023, 01:49 PM #3

Phentos refers exactly to what you intended. My main follow-up is understanding how Clourdflare DNS handles privacy. I’m still unsure about its specific functions. OrbitalBuzzsaw and Tor are both seen as problematic in my view—they’re overly restrictive for everyday use.

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184
10-27-2023, 01:59 PM
#4
A bit too much, but Tor would be fine.
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PickleSauce300
10-27-2023, 01:59 PM #4

A bit too much, but Tor would be fine.

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united32
Senior Member
433
11-14-2023, 07:48 AM
#5
I combine VPN and Tor for added privacy sometimes.
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united32
11-14-2023, 07:48 AM #5

I combine VPN and Tor for added privacy sometimes.

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ToffeeBubba
Junior Member
48
11-14-2023, 04:42 PM
#6
Cloudflare operates as a web service company. They deliver CDN, DNS, server hosting, and additional network solutions to web hosts.
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ToffeeBubba
11-14-2023, 04:42 PM #6

Cloudflare operates as a web service company. They deliver CDN, DNS, server hosting, and additional network solutions to web hosts.

J
Janixx
Member
65
11-14-2023, 06:02 PM
#7
Refers to directly connecting their DNS provider at 1.1.1.1 on a personal computer, rather than using it for broader internet infrastructure or hosting services.
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Janixx
11-14-2023, 06:02 PM #7

Refers to directly connecting their DNS provider at 1.1.1.1 on a personal computer, rather than using it for broader internet infrastructure or hosting services.

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amkli
Member
197
11-15-2023, 02:08 AM
#8
May or may not be slightly faster than your ISP's DNS services. In terms of security I don't see a difference except that your ISP won't be serving DNS requests, which is kind of a non-factor if you care that much about security since they see your data anyway.
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amkli
11-15-2023, 02:08 AM #8

May or may not be slightly faster than your ISP's DNS services. In terms of security I don't see a difference except that your ISP won't be serving DNS requests, which is kind of a non-factor if you care that much about security since they see your data anyway.

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88Phoenix
Member
92
11-15-2023, 10:55 AM
#9
I'm focusing on privacy by using Cloudflare alone isn't enough, even with their logging and data anonymization features. While it prevents your ISP from responding to DNS queries through their servers, your DNS requests remain in plaintext. Anyone—including your ISP—could still inspect the traffic and see your name server activity. To truly protect your DNS traffic, secure those queries using a service like DNSCrypt Proxy before they leave your network. Cloudflare supports DOH (DNS over HTTPS), so you can combine it with DNSCrypt to encrypt your requests. This way, nothing is visible between you and Cloudflare.

Edit: I've been employing DNSCrypt-Proxy alongside Cloudflare at home for most of the past month. Since I already have a local server, I didn't need to set it up on every device; instead, I configured my DHCP server to point to my home server as the default DNS provider, ran DNSCrypt-Proxy there, and everything works seamlessly. Cached lookups are blazing fast, and the service uses only about 8MB of RAM with a cache size of 4096. Edited August 6, 2018 by Tabs
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88Phoenix
11-15-2023, 10:55 AM #9

I'm focusing on privacy by using Cloudflare alone isn't enough, even with their logging and data anonymization features. While it prevents your ISP from responding to DNS queries through their servers, your DNS requests remain in plaintext. Anyone—including your ISP—could still inspect the traffic and see your name server activity. To truly protect your DNS traffic, secure those queries using a service like DNSCrypt Proxy before they leave your network. Cloudflare supports DOH (DNS over HTTPS), so you can combine it with DNSCrypt to encrypt your requests. This way, nothing is visible between you and Cloudflare.

Edit: I've been employing DNSCrypt-Proxy alongside Cloudflare at home for most of the past month. Since I already have a local server, I didn't need to set it up on every device; instead, I configured my DHCP server to point to my home server as the default DNS provider, ran DNSCrypt-Proxy there, and everything works seamlessly. Cached lookups are blazing fast, and the service uses only about 8MB of RAM with a cache size of 4096. Edited August 6, 2018 by Tabs

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xTripleMinerx
Posting Freak
846
11-19-2023, 02:42 PM
#10
Yes, DNS encryption with 1.1.1.1 provides similar privacy benefits to a VPN.
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xTripleMinerx
11-19-2023, 02:42 PM #10

Yes, DNS encryption with 1.1.1.1 provides similar privacy benefits to a VPN.

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