- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
- privacy@lemmy.ca
- firefox@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
- privacy@lemmy.ca
- firefox@lemmy.ml
ECH (encrypted client hello) is going or get enabled by default (already existed in a hidden setting) with version 118.
This page about the version explains a bit better ECH https://support.mozilla.org/fr/kb/understand-encrypted-client-hello
Tho it is still a bit confusing.
From what I understand there is the DNS query > the dns servers sends back an IP. This DNS query can be encrypted with DoH (or DoT?, it seems only DoH from the post).
Then there is a handshake with the website where the website informations can be leaked, and that can be encrypted by ECH (if the website supports it).
Then after that there is a tls connexion established between the website and the user.
The part where I’m confused is : can ECH be used without DoH? If yes that would mean that I can use a DoH capable software and not have to configure it into Firefox? (ex: Nextdns + yogadns)
Hold on, these are orthogonal technologies.
DNSSEC signs DNS records so you know they’re genuine and come straight from the authoritative nameservers for the domain.
DoH encrypts DNS traffic so nobody can eavesdrop on what domains you connect to, and masks it as HTTPS traffic so providers can’t block it to force you to use their nameservers.
Regarding adoption: you can give a user DoH in the browser without them having to know about it, but you can’t enable DNSSEC for a domain owner or nameserver admin without their explicit approval. This will naturally lead to some adoption disparity.
Actually, that’s a pretty decent explanation of why they only want to use DoH. Makes sense to me now, cheers.