I could hack your computer and spy on you. Even it it's not permitted by laws, what stops me from doing it? ________________________________ Von: Samuel B. via swinog swinog@lists.swinog.ch Gesendet: Dienstag, 23. April 2024 12:43 An: swinog@lists.swinog.ch swinog@lists.swinog.ch Betreff: [swinog] Re: Swisscom DNS issue: spectrum-conference.org wrongfully resolves to a bluewin address in swisscom mobile networks
Public DNS Providers could possibly abuse their position and see what users of it are doing on the internet. It‘s different though, because a public dns provider cannot see who the user is exactly, they could take a good guess at it, but it‘s not always certain. ISPs (atleast swiss providers) have logs of IPs to Customer. This would allow the ISP to see exactly what customer XYZ is doing on the internet. Even if it‘s not permitted by privacy laws, what stops the provider from accessing it? Public Providers could do the same, but they most definitely do not know the exact name, address and other details about the customer, as the ISP can. _______________________________________________ swinog mailing list -- swinog@lists.swinog.ch To unsubscribe send an email to swinog-leave@lists.swinog.ch