Thursday, April 9, 2015

How to Encrypt Your DNS for More Secure Browsing



We’ve been touting the benefits of third-party DNS servers for a while now, but one additional benefit that might be of interest is the ability to encrypt all of your DNS requests, further protecting you from anybody spying on you in the middle.
DNSCrypt, from the great team at OpenDNS, is the simple solution that we’ll use to add encryption between your computer and the DNS server. It’s a lightweight solution that works on either Windows or Mac — sadly no mobile support so far.
What this tool is actually doing is creating an encrypted connection to any of the supported DNS servers, and then creating a local DNS proxy on your PC. So when you try to open howtogeek.com, your browser will send a regular DNS query to the 127.0.0.1 localhost address on port 53, and that request will then be forwarded through the encrypted connection to the DNS server.

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