MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!
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@johnpoz said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
Not trying to be defensive, but no this will never be a pfsense anything..
You are absolutely right in this, but we defend against this in the background... or not(?!)
F.E.:
pfBlockerNG DoH server list feeds orI came back, because I was worried about what I found...
FYI, John
The MS support team confirmed that the DoH is supported at OS level, in the "image" which I downloaded from our VLSC account.
Next year, everyone will get this great improvement in the 21H2 image and will not be able to be disabled from the registry.
https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/networking-blog/windows-insiders-can-now-test-dns-over-https/ba-p/1381282
So no one can escape ..., -towards Linux only
sorry for the bad news
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Where does it state that is will on by default.. That you can do it is one thing, that you can't turn it off is another.
In that article you list, no where does it list that you are forced to use doh.. Just that the OS supports it..
That article states it will use doh if you have one of the following already set as your dns..
"Now that the DoH client is active, Windows will start using DoH if you already have one of these servers configured:"
And shows you how to setup and point to your own doh.. And sure it states once this is no longer insider you will not have to do the registry.. But I see nowhere that says or states that its going to use doh be it you like it or not..
I am just not seeing that.. Enabling doh to be used, and to use it if your pointing at some doh enabled IP is completely different than enabling it and using it without letting you not do it..
From everything I have read it not forced upon you.. If I point to 192.168.1.1 as my dns - that will be what is used.
What is a concern is what if you are using one of their doh IPs that they list - and you don't want to use doh? Because sure doh is more secure - its also freaking SLOWER!!! Guess the take is if your worried about dns speed or being able to see what is being queried from your local clients - you would use a local dns.
While they currently only list quad9, cloudflare and google for doh servers. Who wants to bet that MS has their own doh up and running before this goes live? ;)
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@DaddyGo All these DNS providers, dangling this 'carrot'. Eat this one, it's more secure than that one... Free. My mom taught me that when someone says free, run away. It seems that no one is taught that anymore these days... But I digress. I agree with johnpoz, MS will have something, just wait. Genuine MS DNS servers doing DOH. Collecting market data they can cash in on. Nobody does something expensive for free. But as long as the OS abides by what I set for DNS servers, I'm good. And it looks like it will.
It looks like you are using Firefox. I would be more concerned with that, because it can use its own DNS and DOH and ignore what you have set in the OS. This is more worrisome than Windows DOH IMO. How dare they ignore what I have set on my computer. You can imagine parents who have set one of those DNS server services that block adult stuff, only to discover that the child's browser is not using it.
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@Tzvia said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
You can imagine parents who have set one of those DNS server services that block adult stuff, only to discover that the child's browser is not using it.
That is great example of this doh shit can shoot you in the foot for sure..
The browsers and other apps doing this is WAY worse than the OS supporting it.. So if the OS supports it - you think the browsers will adhere to using what your OS is using vs their own circumvention of the users wishes of using what dns they want?
And that is opt out vs opt in total utter BS!!! I don't care how freaking stupid they think the users are - we are doing this for their own good my f'ing ASS!!!!!
Its not spying on where your going - if you ask me for dns ;)
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@johnpoz said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
Where does it state that is will on by default..
Since we have been MS partner and insider for almost 15 years.
I called our contact person at the support group, here I got this information and point at the end of the sentence.
Since I also asked if it could be turned off in the registry, i got this link where it is strongly highlighted that it will not be possible to do so!I’m just giving you data and I’m not arguing, so that’s it for me.
It’s all about projecting the future forward, so as not to be surprised, John let’s talk about from this then in half a year or maybe one...The image (20H2 clean) can still be tried, I would only post anything after that...
+++edit:
I leave this machine hanging on a Wireshark and post some pcap files in a while to analyze and see...
right now this is most of what I do -
@Tzvia said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
dangling this 'carrot'. Eat this one, it's more secure than that one... Free.
Thanks for this mindful post, do you have your own opinion and experience?
I’m happy to give you the "image", you give it a try and talk about it...
Carrots what? cool -
Sounds to me that though it's supported, it's not enforced. What would happen to those of us using the resolver and talking to the roots?
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@provels said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
Sounds to me that though it's supported, it's not enforced. What would happen to those of us using the resolver and talking to the roots?
This is exactly my concern, but since I have the information from an official source, I have no doubt.
We manage nearly 800 Win OP system licenses and even more Office suite licenses.There’s direct contact at MS and it’s unbelievable, but that’s what they said on the phone.
The "mortals" will only get this "image" next year, via the system update, which will be mandatory (21H2).
This raises serious concerns.
in the meantime anything can happen, but I thought I would share this with you...
I don't know anything about the server side and AD background yet, but they will definitely have a great idea for that too.
but anyway, all my evidence for the operation of DoH is above, now I dive deeper and share it here.
I don't usually open a topic here in the forum, but I thought it was important, it is an annoying statement DoH and I am confused by it...
The fact that everyone is just talking about it, but no one dares to try this bastard "image", ergo we deny...
BTW:
what interest I would have to spread horror news, this is a concrete experience and curiosity of course -
@provels said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
What would happen to those of us using the resolver and talking to the roots?
You have your windows machine resolving? You still point to something that is not a doh server even if you were.. You would point to loopback if you were running some resolving software on your windows machine.
I am for sure against this whole central dns nonsense - send us your dns queries, your isp is spying on you..
As no disable it.. Again to use doh have to point know the fqdn that is on the cert.. If I don't point one of the doh servers and I point to something else - how could it be using doh? If it looks up shit via doh while I specifically point to 192.168.1.1 - then yes that is the beginning of the end.. And I move to linux..
Its like the IPv6, you can not really disable it.. You can just not use it.. Even turning it "off" still leaves it enabled... That is how I think this doh support is going to work.
Guess we will see when 21H2 comes out - which isn't all that far from now..
BTW - give me a link to download it from, I will fire it up as a VM.
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So the fear is that MS/whoever and browsers will hardcode DoH servers and they'll bypass unbound by using 443? Other than being a bit slower, what would be the harm? Most any website uses an encrypted connection anyway. ISPs can't read encrypted traffic anyway. Or am I not paranoid enough? :)
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@provels said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
and they'll bypass unbound
That is the concern yes.. I can filter, I can split dns when you point to my own dns. If you bypass I have to trust what that is - I can not resolve..
How do I even resolve my own local resources if your pointing to something on the public.. So I can not even resolve host.localdomain.tld if your going to ask some doh server on the public internet - even if I point to local dns.
The encryption or being slower not all that big of concern - but they deciding that they should bypass what I as the system owner and network operator set for my clients to use is the big issue here.
If you encrypt what is being asked - I can not even tell what is even being asked... Even from my own machine.
If they want to enable the possibility of using doh, that is fine - the concern is doing it without my explicit consent to do so... Maybe I don't want app xyz to be able to resolve something.. Yet again taking control away from the operator if you bypass what I say to use for dns, or use something else for any sort of lookups..
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The MS article posted (from last spring) said it would only apply if certain DNS servers were configured. Doesn’t sound like that’s the case per the OP.
Down sides: 1) bypass any restrictions (malware detection, adult sites, betting, sports, whatever employees shouldn’t do on company time), 2) hopefully won’t bypass company network DNS (Windows domain, split DNS), 3) entities providing it get data from what web sites are visited (like Google DNS), and 4) no local DNS caching.
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@johnpoz
It seems then that there would be plenty of web security gateway providers who would be against this, as well as all of corporate world. -
Yeah I don't see how MS corp customers would be happy about this at all..
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At any rate, I read Unbound 1.12.0 now supports DoH.
So if someone gets bored this weekend... -
What is the point of running doh locally - really?? Other than as a way to satisfy something that wants to use doh. So if I use a local doh, it wont use a public one. This seems more like a way to try and get people to thinking that dns needs to be encrypted.
Doh nor Dot actually does what they say it does anyway - it doesn't hide where you go from the bad old isps being able to spy.. It just changes how they have to go about it. They still see what IP you are going to, until everything and everywhere supports encrypted sni.. They can see where your going in the https handshake..
In what scenario is a local network hostile to the point that would make any sense to encrypt your local dns, and slow it down as well.
What is the extra resources in cpu cycles to have say 100 clients resolve stuff over normal dns, vs 100 clients all doing encryption and the extra cpu cycles the nameserver has to expend to support.
I just really can not think of a use case for running a local doh server..
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@provels said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
this weekend...
Because this weekend all the root-, tld-, domain- and name servers will support it also ?
Would be nice.
My domain name servers (bind) are ready to go.Would be the end of forwarding. Great. Yet another ancient 'setup' that can be buried. DNS would become so complex that know-body touches the default (pSense) settings any more. No more DNS questions : it just plain works out of the box (actually, DNS works out of the box RIGHT NOW but then the admin logged in and well ... checkout this forum to see what happened).
Nicely resolving over 853. Everything hidden (TLS). Everything authenticated (DNSSEC).
What the heck : even certs can be checked using DNS (DNSSEC).I get the bubbles ready.
Where are the two nuclear power plants for compensating the extra power consumption ?
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@johnpoz said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
BTW - give me a link to download it from, I will fire it up as a VM.
I am already working on a longer observation test environment and will be monitoring this machine (20H2 fresh) continuously...but I also have to do my concrete job...
so our ISP is not spying on us :), it is an enterprise network with 3 pcs. 10 Gig optical lines running and serving our radio stations centrally, we have an individual contract with the ISP, who is otherwise the national BIX
soon I will send the link in PM...THX
(pls note that, this is a Hungarian "image" by default)as I would like to note, this machine (20H2) works alongside another 57 windowsmachines and it is only on this that we experience this issue
(I did not install it in my room at home..:)+++edit:
@johnpoz - Thanks for the positive attitude, maybe it turns out what the hell is going on... -
Can the interface be set to english - I'm going to have a difficult time if the interface is in Hungarian ;) hehehe
I can prob muddle through - not like the icons change, that sort of thing.. But searching for stuff that is not english might be a bit painful like control panel etc..
When it comes to the nonsense that is doh, its hard to have a positive attitude to be honest.. I don't care if they want to offer it.. But turning it on by default in browsers is HORRIBLE.. If they attempt to do the same thing in the OS.. Its the just the end to be honest.. It is the wrong direction to be going.. Forcing the use of central dns is NOT the correct direction for privacy or security.
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@johnpoz said in MS activated DoH at the operating system level, in this "great" 20H2 release...?!:
Can the interface be set to english - I'm going to have a difficult time if the interface is in Hungarian ;) hehehe
I think yes :), although I haven't tried...
the installer offers the language selection option in the beginingsince I want to be faithful to the environment, I didn't download the english image
but if you can't choose a language, let me know and I'll give you an English version
I hope it also produces these stupid things in the same way...
and it wasn't just for the Hungarians who intended this stupid DoH stuff, the stupid situation in the country is enough for us... hahaha
(I don't live there but I care what's going on)@johnpoz "If they attempt to do the same thing in the OS.. "
it really is not possible to take a positive approach to this... yes
this would take control out of the hands of the sysadmins and a lot of other shit