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<blockquote data-quote="SohanRay" data-source="post: 980956" data-attributes="member: 94632"><p>No, there's no need to disable protection features. What would happen when outdated lists are being used, is that probably those domains in the lists are already dead. And of course the new malicious ones aren't being added. So if the old domains are present in any case, the lists might help. There could be false positives, but i would recommend to add them manually in the allow list.</p><p></p><p>And about safedns, i had talked to them. I don't know how well their filtering works exactly. But they seem to focus on parental features than security ones. And also their implementation of their service is, well with issues. They can't be used in Android devices by putting a hostname in private dns settings. Also I think they don't support dns encryption in many platforms/scenarios. I had a chat with them on email and that's what I discovered.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SohanRay, post: 980956, member: 94632"] No, there's no need to disable protection features. What would happen when outdated lists are being used, is that probably those domains in the lists are already dead. And of course the new malicious ones aren't being added. So if the old domains are present in any case, the lists might help. There could be false positives, but i would recommend to add them manually in the allow list. And about safedns, i had talked to them. I don't know how well their filtering works exactly. But they seem to focus on parental features than security ones. And also their implementation of their service is, well with issues. They can't be used in Android devices by putting a hostname in private dns settings. Also I think they don't support dns encryption in many platforms/scenarios. I had a chat with them on email and that's what I discovered. [/QUOTE]
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