The Keynote talk is: "Armor for the back half of the camel: Why confidentiality matters for recursive DNS traffic" presetned by Daniel Kahn Gillmor from the ACLU. Slides: https://t.co/QhmidNMEvz
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The next talk is: A Balanced DNS Information Protection Strategy: Minimize at Root and TLD, Encrypt When Needed Elsewhere presented by Scott Hollenbeck from Verisign. Slides: https://t.co/YPb7nOGqvW
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Session 3 is starting: The first talk is a work in progress paper: Programmable In-Network Obfuscation of DNS Traffic, presented by Liang Wang from Princeton University Slides: https://t.co/4rv2CK1jlc
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@shivan_kaul Next talk is: User Expectations and Understanding of Encrypted DNS Settings presented by @feamster from the University of Chicago. Slides: https://t.co/n4TFBNpIKU
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@shivan_kaul We're back after a break! 2nd session is focused on Civil Society, Usability and DNS. First talk is by @MalloryKnodel
Slides: https://t.co/AHyGfYJ16P
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@shivan_kaul The final talk in this session will be @AlecMuffett presenting his experiments with DNS-over-HTTPS-over-Tor (with some beautiful slides): https://t.co/XJm47WduKY
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@shivan_kaul@sudheesh001 (switching to the DNS privacy project account!) Next we have @bassosimone from OONI talking about how they measure DoT/DoH blocking: https://t.co/fO2ifp0ADS
Also - massive kudos to Quad9 for being the first large scale resolver operator to publishing an RPS: a privacy policy based on RFC8932 (BCP232): Recommendations for DNS Privacy Service Operators: https://t.co/a3P1vFvouc
Attention! Submissions deadline for the NDSS 'DNS Privacy Workshop' extended until Friday 8th January 2021 - so still time to submit those papers!
https://t.co/BgehERcRYa