"I did find an interesting discussion by Cloudflare CEO stating how she wants 
digital citizenship to be forced upon everyone, and I found it fascinating that 
my Mozilla Firefox browser was pushing DNS lookups via Cloudflare."

Firstly, I want to very clear that personal privacy, anonymity & security is 
very important to me whether in the digital or non-digital realm and I think 
it's in our collective best interest to be.

With that being said, I'm by no means a digital privacy & security expert.

Here's the DNS data that Cloudflare collects.

:What information does the Cloudflare resolver for Firefox collect?

Any data Cloudflare handles as a result of its resolver for Firefox is as a 
data processor acting pursuant to Firefox’s data processing instructions. 
Therefore, the data Cloudflare collects and processes pursuant to its agreement 
with Firefox is not covered by the [Cloudflare Privacy 
Policy](https://www.cloudflare.com/privacypolicy/)

. As part of its agreement with Firefox, Cloudflare has agreed to collect only 
a limited amount of data about the DNS requests that are sent to the Cloudflare 
Resolver for Firefox via the Firefox browser. Cloudflare will collect only the 
following information from Firefox users:

- date
- dateTime
- srcAsNum
- srcIPVersion
- dstIPVersion
- dstIPv6
- dstIPv4
- dstPort
- protocol
- queryName
- queryType
- queryClass
- queryRd
- queryDo
- querySize
- queryEdns
- ednsVersion
- ednsPayload
- ednsNsid
- responseType
- responseCode
- responseSize
- responseCount
- responseTimeMs
- responseCached
- responseMinTTL
- answerData type
- answerData
- validationState
- coloID (unique Cloudflare data center ID)
- metalId (unique Cloudflare data center ID)

All of the above information will be stored briefly as part of Cloudflare’s 
temporary logs, and then permanently deleted within 24 hours of Cloudflare’s 
receipt of such information. In addition to the above information, Cloudflare 
will also collect and store the following information as part of its permanent 
logs.

- Total number of requests processed by each Cloudflare co-location facility.
- Aggregate list of all domain names requested.
- Samples of domain names queried along with the times of such queries.

Information stored in Cloudflare’s permanent logs will be anonymized and may be 
held indefinitely by Cloudflare for its own internal research and development 
purposes.:"

Reference - 
https://developers.cloudflare.com/1.1.1.1/privacy/cloudflare-resolver-firefox

I don't know what every piece of DNS query data listed is but I can if this is 
accurate and fully transparent I only see the destination ip addr and no source 
ip addr. Therefore, none of your DNS queries can be tied back to your ip 
address.

There isn't anything here that concerns me. Maybe you know more and if you 
think there are things here to be concerned with, I'm very interested in 
learning more.

It seems to me that Mozilla has been investing in privacy & security over the 
years and that investment has paid dividends with good reviews from security 
pros and they've even gained some market share. I believe in the Mozilla 
Foundation and I think it's an organization worth $upporting.

Let me very clearly state that I'm against hate, violence, bigotry, racism, 
oppression, misogyny, ignorance, misinformation and fear mongering. Much of 
which I saw on various social media platforms that I stopped using many years 
ago.

So, when unfounded claims based on fear and/or ignorance are posted in public 
spaces, I strongly support the challenging and open discussion of them.

I did a few quick web searches and I couldn't find any credible sources that 
talked about "digital citizenship being forced upon everyone."

I did however find this TechCrunch article from 2014.

"A lot of political speech now happens online, but that also makes it very 
vulnerable to DDoS attacks from those who don’t agree with a given viewpoint. 
Many of these sites are hosted by individual journalists (and citizen 
journalists, if you want to make that distinction) and artists, who likely 
don’t have the infrastructure and knowledge to protect themselves against these 
attacks.

To help keep these sites operating, online security and CDN service 
[CloudFlare](http://cloudflare.com) today announced [Project 
Galileo](http://projectgalileo.org/), a partnership with 15 NGOs to help it 
identify and protect sites around the world that are under attack. These NGOs 
include the [Access](https://www.accessnow.org/), 
[ACUL](https://www.aclu.org/), the [Electronic Frontier 
Foundation](https://www.eff.org/) (EFF), the[Center for Democracy and 
Technology](https://cdt.org/), [Mozilla](http://www.mozilla.org/), the 
[Committee to Protect Journalists](https://www.cpj.org/) and the [Freedom of 
the Press Foundation](https://pressfreedomfoundation.org/).

Among the sites already protected by the project are minority-rights 
organizations, LGBT groups in Africa and the Middle East, global citizen 
journalists and independent media outlets in the developing world. These sites 
will get the same protection as CloudFlare’s enterprise users."

Reference - 
https://techcrunch.com/2014/06/12/cloudflare-teams-up-with-15-ngos-to-protect-citizen-journalists-and-activists-from-ddos-attacks/

Corporations aren't our friends. They're generally not good citizens in our 
communities. There are mountains of evidence throughout history. I don't trust 
Cloudflare any farther than I can throw them and I don't think anyone should 
blindly trust any corporation or any person, especially someone one on the 
internet that you don't know in person.

But I think trust begins with an honest intention to have an open-minded 
discussion based on facts, data and sound logic.

Sincere Regards,

Mike

Sent with [Proton Mail](https://proton.me/) secure email.

Reply via email to