On Sun, May 12, 2019 at 9:59 AM Nemo via dev-security-policy <
dev-security-policy@lists.mozilla.org> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I've been running a public DNSCrypt resolver[0] for the last 2 years,
> and would like to start a DoH resolver as well. I went through the
> DoH-Resolver-Policy page[1] and have setup a Draft Policy for my
> resolver that is based on it[2].
>
> India specifically, has a lot of Internet Blocks implemented
> haphazardly[3], and I believe that a resolver under Indian jurisdiction
> will help with some of these issues. Right now the blocks are all
> implemented by ISPs as per secret court orders, and we are reliant upon
> user reports to figure out which ISP has blocked what. Most of these
> blocks are implemented on the DNS Level, so DoH has a chance of fixing
> the gap.
>
> Running a independent resolver in the Indian jurisdiction would give us
> a way to challenge blocks in court, and maintain a log of these.
>
> I tried searching online, but could not find the process for getting a
> resolver added to the program. Appreciate any help on the same.
>
> You are correct that Mozilla has not yet published an application process
for DNS over HTTPS Trusted Recursive Resolvers that meet the Mozilla policy
requirements, but I am working on an answer for your specific request.
Meanwhile, it's relatively easy to configure a TRR in Firefox by going to
Preferences, scrolling to the Network Settings section and selecting
"Settings...", then selecting "Enable DNS over HTTPS".

- Wayne
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