
That is exactly the reason why I made it.
I did this to avoid spending $10/month to rent an Indonesian VPS to
run dnsmasq to proxy Google DNS.
The present value of that spending would be about $1779 assuming that
the policy is forever and that the compound yearly inflation rate is
7%.
(No credit card; can't rent US VPS or get AWS free tier.)
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 7:32 PM, Kim-Ee Yeoh
On Thu, Apr 23, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Brandon Allbery
wrote: Bad news: you're going to be trusting your ISP's DNS to get there, unless they can guarantee their IPv4 and/or IPv6 addresses won't change *and* you can remember those addresses *and* they're not using name based virtual hosts or other very common modern HTTP features.
Erik didn't quite spell out the use-case. My guess is that it's to deal with national policies that restrict access to certain sites by blanking out at the ISP DNS level.
So trusting the ISP to get to statdns.com should be fine, assuming that the ISP is only doing the barest minimum to obey the law.
Certainly, given the scenario, there are multiple ways to route around the firewall. But Erik's is a cost-effective, low-maintenance solution.
-- Kim-Ee