Awesome, I didn't know about this. I love Mullvad.
I don't think you need that if you already use their VPN, as that already connects to their DNS servers.
im having trouble setting it up. when i enter the ip into the dns slot in my network settings it does not work.
That’s the unencrypted DNS version. The adblocking will work but your queries won’t be encrypted. You’ll either have to configure it on your browser, or configure system-resolved like what is written in the article that was posted.
Adguard also offers free public DNS. I've used it since discovering that cloudflare blackholes archive.org and all similar sites.
You're probably confusing archive.org (The Internet Archive non-profit organization), which works with cloudflare dns, with archive.is (alternate domain for archive.today website snapshot service, commonly used to bypass paywalled articles), which don't work on cloudflare but it's due to its owner's decision, not cloudflare's fault. The gist is archive.is uses dns-based load balancer and CDN, which requires EDNS Client Subnet to determine the closest servers to serve the request. But Cloudflare disable EDNS Client Subnet on ther DNS service for privacy reason which seems to piss archive.is owner so much they blocked cloudflare dns.
Adguard has a quite comprehensive list of known DNS providers in their documentation. It's very useful because my ISP transparently redirect all dns queries on port 53, so I'll have to find DNS providers that listen on alternate ports for my upstream DNS in my Adguard instance.
If you have the skill to implement Pi Hole is the best option. If not MullvadDNS is a solid option but if you want a granular control over your DNS queries no doubt NextDNS.
In case you are unaware, make sure to override DNS on any web browsers or other programs that might be skipping OS configured DNS servers to use hard-coded DNS over HTTPS servers.
If you're running your own DNS resolver you can hint this to some applications in your network via a canary domain
Mullvad recently announced a free encrypted DNS. It can block ads and malware too.
https://mullvad.net/en/help/dns-over-https-and-dns-over-tls
Awesome, I didn't know about this. I love Mullvad.
I don't think you need that if you already use their VPN, as that already connects to their DNS servers.
im having trouble setting it up. when i enter the ip into the dns slot in my network settings it does not work.
That’s the unencrypted DNS version. The adblocking will work but your queries won’t be encrypted. You’ll either have to configure it on your browser, or configure system-resolved like what is written in the article that was posted.
Other options are Aha DNS and Control D.
If your distro makes use of systemd, just use resolved: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Systemd-resolved#Manually
Adguard also offers free public DNS. I've used it since discovering that cloudflare blackholes archive.org and all similar sites.
You're probably confusing archive.org (The Internet Archive non-profit organization), which works with cloudflare dns, with archive.is (alternate domain for archive.today website snapshot service, commonly used to bypass paywalled articles), which don't work on cloudflare but it's due to its owner's decision, not cloudflare's fault. The gist is archive.is uses dns-based load balancer and CDN, which requires EDNS Client Subnet to determine the closest servers to serve the request. But Cloudflare disable EDNS Client Subnet on ther DNS service for privacy reason which seems to piss archive.is owner so much they blocked cloudflare dns.
Run a Pi-hole with Unbound
Seriously, can vouch for this. Pi-hole is great!
I’ve been using Quad9 and I’m happy with it. Here’s the site if you’re interested in looking into it further.
Quad9
Mullvad is another great option that’s already been mentioned.
At home you can use Unbound
This coupled with pihole is great! The pihole docs even have setup for unbound and it’s really easy to follow.
Honest question, what's wrong with cloudflare?
Quad9 or mullvads dns
Mullvad is a better option
Why?
Here are two resources for privacy-oriented DNS:
Adguard has a quite comprehensive list of known DNS providers in their documentation. It's very useful because my ISP transparently redirect all dns queries on port 53, so I'll have to find DNS providers that listen on alternate ports for my upstream DNS in my Adguard instance.
If you have the skill to implement Pi Hole is the best option. If not MullvadDNS is a solid option but if you want a granular control over your DNS queries no doubt NextDNS.
OpenNIC https://www.opennic.org/
Adguard has an encrypted dns
In case you are unaware, make sure to override DNS on any web browsers or other programs that might be skipping OS configured DNS servers to use hard-coded DNS over HTTPS servers.
If you're running your own DNS resolver you can hint this to some applications in your network via a canary domain
If you are in Europe, try dns0: https://www.dns0.eu/
I'm shilling for controld.com and I will die on this hill.
Have a look at https://dnsforge.de