this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2024
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It's not up to Chrome.
The day they do their own DoH in-browser it is definitely up to them. It's already opt-in if you want to see how well your pi-hole won't work with it enabled.
Next step is to do DoH by default, and finally making it compulsory.
Chrome already does have DoH enabled by default from what I can tell.
https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/10468685
They can do it all they want but it won't work...
If I "opt in" it falls back to non doh immediately because using doh on my network is not up to Chrome.
use-application-dns.net + nxdomain for any known doh provider
I don't use pihole but doh blocking works great on my network. It should work on a pihole tho it's pretty basic stuff.
If you can't resolve the domain you can't validate the TLS certificate.