Disappointed that Firefox is giving Cloudflare user DNS resolution data by default via DoH. I trust my ISP but if I didn't, I'd use a trusted VPN to protect *all* my traffic. DoH is just a DNS-only VPN. What's worse, if you do use a VPN for FF will still leak your DNS data to Cloudflare by default. blog.mozilla.org/futurerelease

Ask yourself why all these companies are fighting each other to be your default DNS provider. Why do their "privacy" solutions always give them your data instead? It's valuable data and it's easy to control it yourself. linuxjournal.com/content/own-y

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@kyle Is it valuable data? Neither Mozilla nor Cloudflare seem to have an economic incentive to monetize this data. Also, Cloudflare’s privacy policy states:

@jeremiahlee it's your entire browsing history. Every site you visit. Very valuable data and their privacy policy is vague about which data they keep indefinitely, so you focus on the "24hrs" part.

@kyle I agree the data is sensitive. There has to be a buyer to make it valuable. Outside of ad targeting, I am not sure who would be interested in buying Cloudflare's DNS access data if the information necessary to target an individual is removed.

@jeremiahlee Cloudflare says they don't sell it for ads, but to answer your question in general, the value is the association of a series of websites with an individual, even if you don't know *who* the individual is.

Advertisers find a lot of value in "someone who likes X also likes Y but doesn't like Z" so that when they do have a target in mind that likes X, they know to market Y to them but not Z. This is why social graphs are valuable--friends/colleagues often share preferences.

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