Your ISP knows where you click. Why Encrypted DNS (DoH/DoT/DoQ) is a must

Reports 2026-05-23 3 min read

Every time you type a website address (like facebook.com), your computer performs a DNS query, similar to looking up a name in a digital phone book. In 99% of traditional home routers, this query is sent in plain text (on port 53).

What does this mean in practice? Your Internet Service Provider (ISP) sees every domain you visit, when you do it, and for how long. Even if the site itself is secured with a padlock (HTTPS), the mere fact of your visit is fully visible at the DNS level. In many countries, collecting and then selling these behavioral profiles to advertisers is completely legal.

"Internet Service Providers (ISPs) hold a privileged position to monitor, intercept, and analyze their customers' network traffic. A lack of strong DNS encryption allows them to profile users and monetize their browsing history."
— Warning from privacy experts (including the EFF)

The end of surveillance: DoH, DoT, DoQ in the GADNET system

If privacy is a right, GADNET’s tools are its enforcer. When designing our system, we decided to close this massive privacy gap for all your devices with just one button.

By default, the GADNET system does not use the outdated, plain-text DNS protocol. Instead, it seals all your queries in an encrypted envelope, using modern standards that no one on the “You - Internet” line can look into:

  • DoH (DNS-over-HTTPS): DNS queries are hidden within regular, encrypted web traffic (HTTPS). From the outside, your ISP sees it as if you were browsing a normal website, not knowing which domain the query actually targets.
  • DoT (DNS-over-TLS): A dedicated tunnel secured with the TLS protocol directly to a certified resolver (like Cloudflare or Quad9), which guarantees that no one has injected their own fake addresses or ads into the results.
  • DoQ (DNS-over-QUIC): The latest generation. It runs on the UDP protocol, ensuring lightning-fast response times and instant handling of network changes (like switching from Wi-Fi to 5G).

By implementing these mechanisms, GADNET de facto obfuscates your browsing history from Internet Service Providers (ISPs), giving you control and 100% query anonymity in your own home.

Data is the currency of today’s world, don’t give it away for free to your provider! Choose GADNET.