On 13/10/20 10:37 pm, David Lochrin wrote:
I searched for 23.236.62.147 on https://dnslytics.com/reverse-ip as you suggested, and 
that site reported "Found 6,281,493 domains hosted on IP address 
23.236.62.147".  Over six million IP domains hanging on one address!!

I can't imagine the designers of HTTP 1.1 had that in mind 23 years ago when 
the RFC was published, and there must surely be some compromises.  What on 
earth has happened to IP6?


To be honest, virtual hosting is so well developed that I don't see it going away even with IPv6. If you were to allocate each of those sites their own addresses then you need extra configuration of the network stack and changes to the DNS config and I don't think there is a lot of value.

Besides, there is a privacy advantage to IP address sharing anyway. With an encrypted connection (HTTPS), when you connect to 23.236.62.147, your ISP (and your government) doesn't know which of the 6,281,493 domains you are looking at. Are you looking for a recipe for sourdough or for a bomb?

For full privacy, you need DNS over TLS or DNS over HTTPS (DoT/DoH) to hide your DNS requests from your ISP (and your government), and you need encrypted SNI. The former is out there and now built-in to Firefox, the latter is coming too.


Hamish

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