"Google, this is bogus as hell," Paul Vixie ranted on Internet Engineering Task Force mail list this week. The IETF mail list is where the people who create the internet's technologies converse.
The post was noticed because Paul Vixie is an Internet Hall of Fame engineer known for his pioneering work on the modern Domain Name Service (DNS).
And it is how Google was using DNS in its Chromecast Ultra streaming device that ticked him off.
[...] [Vixie] bought a Google Chromecast. But when he went to set it up, he found it doing something no device in his network is allowed to do: It wouldn't use his own, private DNS server. It would only use Google's public server.
Related: Paul Vixie: New TLDs a Money Grab, and a Mistake
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Paul Vixie on the Benefits of Running DNS Services Locally
(Score: 2) by Whoever on Monday February 18 2019, @04:25AM
I think you will find that Windows has *never* fully used the DNS data that is in a DHCP reply. Windows only uses two resolvers, irrespective of how many the DHCP server to the client. I think there is other information in a dhcp reply that Windows ignores.