On 11/11/12 15:54, Reindl Harald wrote:
if your ISP decides to setup a transparent DNS proxy
or block port 53 to DNS servers which are not his you
are out of opttions except wsitch to another ISP and
amek sure he decides not the same way some moths later

here where i live this all is theory, but i am aware
that in other countries this things are normal as like
power outages which are also unknown here most of the time

If I use 74.125.239.9 I  get google.com so it seems logical that
my own name server would provide 74.125.239.9 and I would go to Google?

   [bobg@box7 ~]$ nslookup google.com
   Server:        192.168.1.1
   Address:    192.168.1.1#53

   Non-authoritative answer:
   Name:    google.com
   Address: 74.125.239.9
   Name:    google.com
   Address: 74.125.239.14

We are in a rural are here but fortunately rarely have power failures.
Occasionally there will be a transient, lights may blink, but the UPS's
handle that and they are hardly noticed. If power fails we have a motor
generator for backup.
.

--
http://www.qrz.com/db/W2BOD

box7

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