However, the DNS part remains a hard one. * Every packet is authenticated, every packet can be encrypted * Anyone can generate a new one on-demand It would be much more interesting to replace IP, like Yggdrasil does (and I think gnunet, cjdns, hyperboria & others). not because of the feature, but instead, if I enable it, I'll be cut off from legacy sites by a wall of forever "Do you want to really do this?" with likely 10 clicks of 'yes' and 'ok' and 'i understand', combined with never storing this as a default. My point is, this is going to be annoying. However, the idea that "Firefox knows best" is the sort of asinine behaviour that causes big tech issues all the time. I have zero issues with safer defaults, prompting when required. Yet, do you think I can tell my browser "never ever prompt for this again"? Nope. Why would I spent 10 seconds setting such things up? They're locked behind a firewall, (a secondary firewall), have no direct network access, and can't even be reached without port forwarding via SSH. Going through multiple prompts, each and every time someone wants to do what they want, is problematic. The real and true bothersome part, is that Firefox (and others) do not seem to allow permanent exceptions.
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