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ln -sf /run/systemd/resolve/stub-resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
dnsleaktest does show 3 cloudflare servers, but stilll the six JIO servers.
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The DNS leaks should disappear.
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The DNS leaks should disappear.
Link 2 (enp3s0)
Current Scopes: DNS LLMNR/IPv4 LLMNR/IPv6 mDNS/IPv4 mDNS/IPv6
Protocols: +DefaultRoute +LLMNR +mDNS -DNSOverTLS DNSSEC=no/unsupported
DNS Servers: 192.168.29.1 2405:201:302f:b8eb::c0a8:1d01
"192.168.29.1" is the jio one
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even though the leaks didn't disappear, i can access block sites like themoviedb.org now.
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I can't say for sure why your providers DNS servers still gets "concatenated" to the cloudflare ones in your leak test but to me everything looks O.K. now. "192.168.x.x" is a private IPv4 network that will not leak beyond your router.
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I can't say for sure why your providers DNS servers still gets "concatenated" to the cloudflare ones in your leak test but to me everything looks O.K. now. "192.168.x.x" is a private IPv4 network that will not leak beyond your router.
A question unrelated to the issue, are private ip leaks really a problem? is it worth hiding them?
asking as i didn't bother hiding any ip...
Last edited by Elixirslayer (2024-11-18 18:55:02)
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That's a little dependent on your personal level of paranoia .
If you leak a private address like "192.168.0.10" (or 1 or 2 instead of 0) it's not much information because those networks are common.
Some (factory default) numbering schemes may give away the brand of your router, for example.
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That's a little dependent on your personal level of paranoia .
If you leak a private address like "192.168.0.10" (or 1 or 2 instead of 0) it's not much information because those networks are common.
Some (factory default) numbering schemes may give away the brand of your router, for example.
I see, thanks for the answer.
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