while on macOS it will be:
$ sudo scutil --set HostName “[newhostname]”
As we will often see throughout the course,
Windows manages information
in its own way. In this case, you have to
right-click the Computer icon and select
Properties. You’ll find all the hostname information in the screen under
“
Computer Name, Domain and Workgroup Settings”.
2.3 Domain Name System
Before the invention of DNS, if you had to access
to a computer in a
network, you had to know its IP address, namely a set of numbers identifying an
IT device in a network (we’ll cover it shortly). As devices increased in number,
it became impossible to remember such sets, therefore, in 1983, a new system
was created in order to help memorizing them, using a unique name (i.e.
inforge.net)
instead of the reference IP address (such as 192.124.249.10).
It was the birth of DNS logic and the related DNS servers, which translate a
domain name into the matching
IP address. Domain is not referring to the
website only, but to the entire network – we use the term domain to represent an
entire network consisting in computers that share the same logic and the same
rules enforced by their admins. For now, you only need to know that your
computer or Internet network will only respond
to the DNS given by your ISP,
unless it is explicitly expressed.
As we are going to see, one of the major threats to users privacy online are
Internet Service Providers (ISPs), for this reason you should replace the DNS
you are using, whether you want to be 100% anonymous or not. Furthermore,
you should consider the huge advantage in terms of response offered by more
efficient and trusted alternate services. As you may
have noticed for many
websites, in order to accelerate governmental takedown operations, the
competent bodies commit to directly censoring a domain resolution from a DNS,
rather than blocking the related serves: it already happened for many sites (like
The Pirate Bay) and it will keep on happening in the future. Using unfiltered
DNS, you’ll be a little more anonymous and automatically access to a complete,
unfiltered list of all the websites actually available on Internet.
2.3.1 Choosing DNS
You can use two types of DNS: public and private ones.
Using public DNS you will improve your anonymity and privacy, and your
DNS
requests will be faster, with a safer navigation (if you are concerned about
malware-filled sites). Public DNS usually leverage two IP addresses, known as
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