Mozilla Just Made Firefox More Private and Secure for US Users https://t.co/GmGha9wqWx pic.twitter.com/AphrKc8L4K
— PCMag (@PCMag) February 25, 2020
I keep telling the surveillance advertising ecosystem to stop playing cat-and-mouse with the browsers. THEY are the user agent, and their technologists are mission-driven. https://t.co/2afLPxaQle
— Fatemeh Khatibloo (@fatemehx2) February 25, 2020
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs https://t.co/WPg5HKZN73
— Dmitri ☭⚛ (@yogthos) February 25, 2020
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs https://t.co/RthHXZBHIZ @JBrodkin
— Joseph Lorenzo Hall, PhD (@JoeBeOne) February 25, 2020
#Firefox to use #CloudFlare's Encrypted DNS service by default for it's userbase to help thwart #ISP's and third parties from monitoring consumer's browsing history https://t.co/Yjkr61Kn6l #Privacy #Encryption
— Fyasko (@Fyaasko) February 25, 2020
The data supply chain wars continue.. browsers VS ISPs - imo Firefox is taking steps that put AT&T’s ISP+ad tech empire in the headlights. More needs to be done for consumers here. ??
— ℨ??? ??????? (@thezedwards) February 25, 2020
“Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs” https://t.co/DrQFTRs9Cy
Firefox will start switching browser users to Cloudflare's encrypted-DNS service today and roll out the change across the United States in the coming weeks. https://t.co/8gxxN7KevF
— Adam Levin (@Adam_K_Levin) February 25, 2020
US-based Firefox users get encrypted DNS lookups as company begins roll out of #DoH functionality https://t.co/lsYxaECEoC
— CIRA (@ciranews) February 25, 2020
So I've never liked @firefox. Just wasn't my cup of tea as a browser. But with the announcement of them turning on DoH by default I may just switch browsers. https://t.co/wnVCrcF6c5
— Mason Egger (@masonegger) February 25, 2020
[아스테크니카] 파이어폭스, 통신을 들여다보는 통신사를 막고자 암호화된 DNS를 켜다https://t.co/2LmGYYyOXM
— 라루얀 / 말썽쟁이 구운 경단 ? (@LaruYan) February 25, 2020
미국에서 파폭의 클플 DoH를 켜기로 함. 통신사는 구글 크롬에서 DoH 보급에 대해 반대한다며 로비하고 있음. 한편 미국 밖에서도 파폭 사용자는 클플 외 NextDNS나 수동 입력도 선택 가능
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs - Firefox will start switching browser users to Cloudflare's encrypted-DNS service today and roll out the change across the United States in the coming weeks. https://t.co/j3sgRvqdbe
— switched (@switch_d) February 25, 2020
New: Mozilla says it will enable the controversial DNS-over-HTTPS security feature in Firefox by default to all U.S. users. https://t.co/K6R9A6CWnf
— Zack Whittaker (@zackwhittaker) February 25, 2020
Good to see Mozilla enabling DNS-over-HTTPS by default in Firefox (for US users for now). DNS-based censorship at the resolver or network level is a real thing (hello, Turkey) and this will bypass it https://t.co/xSOh6cTGP5
— Martijn Grooten (@martijn_grooten) February 25, 2020
Firefox to enable DNS-over-HTTPS by default to US users | TechCrunch https://t.co/kwtu17jxF5
— PrivacyDigest (@PrivacyDigest) February 25, 2020
Kudos to the #Firefox team for taking a bold step toward #privacy by default!https://t.co/JX88KGWDiF
— Thunderbird (@mozthunderbird) February 25, 2020
Good. https://t.co/w3mKNHnXsE
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) February 25, 2020
Firefox turns controversial new encryption on by default in the US https://t.co/LQ2QGbTxmU pic.twitter.com/YDi6q24L9m
— The Verge (@verge) February 25, 2020
Whenever you visit a website, there’s a part of your internet communications that’s largely unencrypted, but which could reveal which websites your visiting. Today, Firefox will start turning on a technology by default that it hopes will stop it https://t.co/kBaEDltVgp
— jon.porter (@JonPorty) February 25, 2020
Firefox turns controversial new encryption on by default in the US: #ai #deeplearning #iot HT @MikeQuindazzi https://t.co/45Jy55ApAc pic.twitter.com/NXpAjz0gLG
— Kim Muro (@WorldTrendsInfo) February 25, 2020
For those who don’t understand importance: DNS converts the web site name you type into your browser into the site’s IP address to send your browser to that page. Encrypting it would help prevent attackers from intercepting your browser and sending it to a malicious site instead. https://t.co/GqttD8b2UW
— Kim Zetter (@KimZetter) February 25, 2020
This is a great and thorough explanation in plain language about why Google and Mozilla decided to encrypt your browser’s DNS requests and what it means for privacy and security https://t.co/6aq2Yfxt62
— Kim Zetter (@KimZetter) February 25, 2020
“Users have the option to choose between two providers — Cloudflare and NextDNS”
— Kenn White (@kennwhite) February 25, 2020
[that sound you hear is enterprise network teams collectively realizing they've lost visibility into egress IoCs] https://t.co/r8HQED5DUi
DNS, HTTPS, DoH, it's a lot of acronyms.
— Firefox ? (@firefox) February 25, 2020
The most important thing to know is we're basically saying FU to attackers on the network and 3rd parties who have access to data that ties your computer to the sites you visit.https://t.co/S6GpzuMEJR
Good for consumers but bad for marketers? https://t.co/ki1MBj9vHt
— Andy Beal (@AndyBeal) February 25, 2020
Today, @firefox starts encrypting crucial internet address lookup technology called DNS — only in the US. DoH (DNS over HTTPS) has its detractors, but you can disable it. https://t.co/lCarAXNNpg
— Stephen Shankland (@stshank) February 25, 2020
Mozilla just made Firefox more private and secure for U.S. users https://t.co/i1tqmlq6KX via @PCMag
— FutureShift (@futureshift) February 25, 2020
The Verge: Firefox turns controversial new encryption on by default in the US.https://t.co/oiqrPY2e9l
— Agape (Angel With A Shotgun) (@anathymadevice) February 25, 2020
Love the DoH idea, but if the internet service providers will still be able to see which IP addresses their users are connecting to, what is DoH good for? Enquiring mind would like to understand better...https://t.co/xxrnpy0BYt
— Ferdinando M. Ametrano (@Ferdinando1970) February 25, 2020
This is a good move. The Firefox team sees where the future is going. #PrivacyByDefault #Future #tech #Firefoxhttps://t.co/m4QtjyJU6U
— Ryan Lee Sipes (@ryanleesipes) February 25, 2020
Firefox DNS over HTTPS rollout beings in the U.S. #Firefox #DoH https://t.co/U0aAponof9 pic.twitter.com/G5pxwLeY9W
— Neowin (@NeowinFeed) February 25, 2020
Firefox Begins Rollout of Encrypted DNS Over HTTPS (DoH) - https://t.co/gvE03u07TU pic.twitter.com/Msm8PzJiYq
— Paul Thurrott (@thurrott) February 25, 2020
.@Firefox is the first major browser to roll out DNS over HTTPS by default https://t.co/oV1lG4575E
— Emil Protalinski (@EPro) February 25, 2020
最近のFirefoxのロゴ、もはや原型がない……https://t.co/uBnvYsZVlu
— TSUBAME (@tbm_hiro) February 25, 2020
"Firefox will start switching browser users to Cloudflare's encrypted-DNS service today & roll out change across the US... [helps] potentially make it more difficult for Internet service providers or other 3rd parties to monitor what websites you visit:"https://t.co/GnVqfZD2Fx
— Center for Democracy & Technology (@CenDemTech) February 26, 2020
Noice!https://t.co/uhT6nt8iIv
— ?????? ???????? (@CurtBraz) February 25, 2020
He hides his DNS activity with THIS ONE EASY TRICK! ISPs hate him!! https://t.co/zwEKfxhIhY
— TechLinked (@TechLinkedYT) February 26, 2020
Today, Firefox began the rollout of encrypted DNS over HTTPS (DoH) by default for US-based users," Firefox maker Mozilla said in an announcement scheduled to go live at this link Tuesday morning. https://t.co/NVxHFKiQKv via @arstechnica
— Martial Gervaise (@argevise) February 25, 2020
Great move @firefox! https://t.co/Ry45oGVbhp
— Jason Harris (@harrisja) February 25, 2020
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPshttps://t.co/n2j76PuDg3 #CyberSecurity #infosec #privacy
— Eng. Mahmoud Soliman (@EMahmoudSoliman) February 26, 2020
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs https://t.co/zuWWqjfd5E
— Državljan D (@DrzavljanD) February 26, 2020
.@Firefox turns encrypted #DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPs https://t.co/gCDYE4gSZC | .@arstechnica #lawtwitter #dataprotection #datasecurity #encryption pic.twitter.com/647o41BI1H
— Tom Martin (@lawdroid) February 26, 2020
Firefox turns encrypted DNS on by default to thwart snooping ISPshttps://t.co/55ARzRZsbt
— Dalai Clawma (@greyhathackr) February 25, 2020
“Whenever you visit a website — even if it’s HTTPS enabled — the DNS query that converts the URL into an IP address is usually unencrypted. DoH, encrypts the request so that it can’t be intercepted or hijacked in order to send a user to a malicious site.” https://t.co/ue2TnoYVaS
— Amin Sabeti | امین ثابتی (@AminSabeti) February 26, 2020
The only controversy is from companies losing money over not being able to see/sell your data https://t.co/1mCOFs7Hs0
— brianweeden (@brianweeden) February 26, 2020
Firefox turns controversial new encryption on by default in the US. The reason:
— SimonJHarris (@SimonJHarris) February 26, 2020
US carriers like AT&T are building ad-tracking networks, encryption won't stop the data collection but it’ll make it more difficult.
Safari to follow suit? cc @johnwilander https://t.co/iDMsbstRqU
Firefox enables DNS-over-HTTPS by default (with Cloudflare) for all U.S. users#cybersecurity #informationsecurity #networksecurity #informationtechnology #hacking #malware #vulnerability #vaultinfosec #wevowyoursecurity #mozilla #websecurity #privacy https://t.co/NtWtNndbG4
— Vault Infosec (@vaultinfosec) February 26, 2020
Time to switch back over to @firefox as my browser
— Nathan Thomas (@nwthomas_) February 26, 2020
Great job @mozilla ??https://t.co/4OwTtY6pKK
Firefox turns controversial new encryption on by default in the US - The Verge https://t.co/1ndVZN3Hh4
— Erik Christiansen (@eriksation) February 26, 2020
Excellent news as Firefox turns new encryption on by default in the US #security #Cybersecurity #Privacy https://t.co/3vgWtUN5R8
— Nick van Terheyden, MD - "Dr Nick" (@drnic1) February 25, 2020
모질라 파이어폭스가 미국 사용자들에 대해 도메인 요청 암호화(DNS over HTTPS) 기능을 제공하기 시작함 https://t.co/WdR4IqvaLu
— H. Kim (@metavital) February 26, 2020
Firefox’s new #privacy feature makes it harder for others to track you online via @CNET
— Syfer (@mysyfer) February 25, 2020
Stay #SaferwithSyfer #Syfer #IoT #cybersecurity #internethttps://t.co/ADqJcTyQX2