In a lot of use cases you only need to change the host name. https://dns0.eu/ or dns0.eu is not that difficult to remember.
The ip addresses are indeed not memorable, but users who change the settings of their routers won’t have too much trouble copy and pasting an IP address once or twice. Save it in a password manager and you’re done.
Bureaucracy has nothing to do with it, it’s a matter of resources.
I totally agree. When you go into that much trouble of creating an alternative (safer) EU DNS, try at least to make it user memorable by using easy IPs. I don5 understand why other HN users have downvoted your comment.
Would be cool, but it's very very hard to get such a memorable IP. And it costs a lot of money. Those who own such IPs wont give them away so easily. So unless you get a donation of such an IP address (actually more a block of IPs, like Quad9 who got 9.9.9.0/24 from IBM, see e.g. https://www.reddit.com/r/privacytoolsIO/comments/llqd7h/quad...), or have a lot of money... you'll probably be out of luck.
Because I set DNS approximately once per LAN that I build, when I configure its DHCP. The pretty IPs are cool, but this isn’t something I type more than once per year or so.
klabb3|8 months ago
I truly don’t get this. Is it a Europe = bureaucracy take?
> they came up with IP's that can't be more random
Came up with? I imagine those novelty IPs are extremely difficult and expensive to acquire.
That said I 100% agree memorable IPs is very useful for DNS config.
notpushkin|8 months ago
yabatopia|8 months ago
The ip addresses are indeed not memorable, but users who change the settings of their routers won’t have too much trouble copy and pasting an IP address once or twice. Save it in a password manager and you’re done.
Bureaucracy has nothing to do with it, it’s a matter of resources.
1vuio0pswjnm7|8 months ago
For example
https://github.com/samhocevar/rinetdnbernard|8 months ago
NKosmatos|8 months ago
ale42|8 months ago
kstrauser|8 months ago
nottorp|8 months ago
Could you afford 4.4.4.4?