Apr 23, 2014, 12:41 pm
(This post was last modified: Apr 23, 2014, 14:36 pm by bill_214. Edited 2 times in total.)
(Forgive me if this isn't the correct category or it's been posted before. It seems appropriate and I didn't find it posted anywhere but perhaps I've missed it. It does seem unlikely that I'm the first person to notice this.)
It appears opendns is blocking at least some torrent sites.
I've been using the opendns DNS servers for years, ever since someone here years ago posted doing so as a workaround for some countries and ISPs blocking websites just because it seemed like a good idea anyway.
I often do Google searches for .torrent files using the hash (because I like the actual.torrent) as well as searching for torrented content by name/title.
The last few days I've noticed that on most (read that as "nearly all") results I get a Firefox error message "the page isn't redirecting properly" and following the listed fixes for this such as deleting cookies, accepting all cookies, clearing the cache, etc listed on the Mozilla support site for Firefox wasn't helping.
Note that this was happening both when connecting directly through Google, on third party sites like torrentz.pro where you might get results listed for several torrent sites for a particular search, and also when I would attempt to download a .torrent file from several torrent sites that may or may not be storing .torrent files at TheTorrent.org or other similar sites.
I also should mention that I was getting the same error message for duckduckgo, and that is resolved using my ISP's DNS server as well.
I noticed that the error message always has an opendns web address so I checked t see if my manually entered DNS servers were still entered and they were. After fiddling with different solutions a bit more to no avail I unchecked the "use these DNS servers" and reverted to "obtain DNS servers addresses automatically" so I'm using my ISP's DNS servers and now am able to connect to those pages I was unable to connect to before.
I have several questions...
Is opendns blocking sites or have I missed something?
If I'm using my ISP's DNS servers does this make me more vulnerable that I was before? Does this configuration mean that perhaps my ISP can see my surfing habits now or could they see that all along anyway as I expect they could?
Is there an alternative to opendns's DNS servers I can enter manually as I did before with opendns's servers so I don't have to use my ISP's DNS servers?
Am I the only one that's noticed this?
I expect this isn't an issue for those that are in love with magnet links but I prefer actual.torrent files as they let me view what's in the torrent and also list the file size in my client as I tend to load .torrents into my client and DL them later if I'm low on HDD space. I only use magnets when I can't find a .torrent file by searching the hash either by getting it off the site's page or ripping it out of the magnet link. (I'm sure you guys already know that everything between the ":" and the "&" is the hash in a magnet link)
Any thoughts or suggestions?
(BTW, I had to re-register with my same username on this board as my account was deleted, perhaps for non-usage as I don't visit here all that often)
Update: I went back to opendns to get their DNS server addresses and re-entered them as my DNS servers and the problem has reappeared. Earlier I did erroneously state that I was getting the same error message for duckduckgo as the torrent sites however that was incorrect.
The error message for duckduckgo is "this connection is untrusted" while the torrent site related error is "The page isn't redirecting properly. Firefox has detected that the server is redirecting the request for this address in a way that will never complete."
(edited (again) for clarification and additional information)
It appears opendns is blocking at least some torrent sites.
I've been using the opendns DNS servers for years, ever since someone here years ago posted doing so as a workaround for some countries and ISPs blocking websites just because it seemed like a good idea anyway.
I often do Google searches for .torrent files using the hash (because I like the actual.torrent) as well as searching for torrented content by name/title.
The last few days I've noticed that on most (read that as "nearly all") results I get a Firefox error message "the page isn't redirecting properly" and following the listed fixes for this such as deleting cookies, accepting all cookies, clearing the cache, etc listed on the Mozilla support site for Firefox wasn't helping.
Note that this was happening both when connecting directly through Google, on third party sites like torrentz.pro where you might get results listed for several torrent sites for a particular search, and also when I would attempt to download a .torrent file from several torrent sites that may or may not be storing .torrent files at TheTorrent.org or other similar sites.
I also should mention that I was getting the same error message for duckduckgo, and that is resolved using my ISP's DNS server as well.
I noticed that the error message always has an opendns web address so I checked t see if my manually entered DNS servers were still entered and they were. After fiddling with different solutions a bit more to no avail I unchecked the "use these DNS servers" and reverted to "obtain DNS servers addresses automatically" so I'm using my ISP's DNS servers and now am able to connect to those pages I was unable to connect to before.
I have several questions...
Is opendns blocking sites or have I missed something?
If I'm using my ISP's DNS servers does this make me more vulnerable that I was before? Does this configuration mean that perhaps my ISP can see my surfing habits now or could they see that all along anyway as I expect they could?
Is there an alternative to opendns's DNS servers I can enter manually as I did before with opendns's servers so I don't have to use my ISP's DNS servers?
Am I the only one that's noticed this?
I expect this isn't an issue for those that are in love with magnet links but I prefer actual.torrent files as they let me view what's in the torrent and also list the file size in my client as I tend to load .torrents into my client and DL them later if I'm low on HDD space. I only use magnets when I can't find a .torrent file by searching the hash either by getting it off the site's page or ripping it out of the magnet link. (I'm sure you guys already know that everything between the ":" and the "&" is the hash in a magnet link)
Any thoughts or suggestions?
(BTW, I had to re-register with my same username on this board as my account was deleted, perhaps for non-usage as I don't visit here all that often)
Update: I went back to opendns to get their DNS server addresses and re-entered them as my DNS servers and the problem has reappeared. Earlier I did erroneously state that I was getting the same error message for duckduckgo as the torrent sites however that was incorrect.
The error message for duckduckgo is "this connection is untrusted" while the torrent site related error is "The page isn't redirecting properly. Firefox has detected that the server is redirecting the request for this address in a way that will never complete."
(edited (again) for clarification and additional information)