I’ve been looking this up for days, and at a complete dead end now. Everything I find basically comes down to remove the dns address, turn it off, or change the address to 1.1.1.1. None of this works.
You can see in the picture that it’s turned off, and there are no saved addresses to remove. It won’t even save an address if I enter one. I can’t find anything else on my phone that references dns or network settings. I’m only using cell data, not connected to any wifi. Changing the setting to automatic doesn’t do allow me to visit sites either. Changing a setting and power cycling the phone doesn’t change anything.
I’ve spoken with my carrier, there are no parental blocks on my account. I’m the only person on the account. No one else has access.
When I go to a site my browser tells me the site is not secure, mentions opendns, and gives me the option to continue anyways. Doing so only routes back to the same not secure message. I can’t go any further.
I have no idea how this got on my phone, but it’s been on it for a couple months now. I’m sure I’m forgetting some info, but I’ve listed the main things. Any help would be appreciated, this is just stupid at this point.
If there’s a better /c/ to ask about this in let me know. Thanks everyone!
EDIT: Lem453 got me back online with thier suggestion. Select the bottom option “private DNS hostname” and enter either one.one.one.one or DNS.google.com.
Lots of good info provided by people too in the comments. As much as this has been frustrating for me on a daily basis it’s also given me new knowledge on how my phone works, so that’s pretty cool.
I think none of this has to do with Private DNS (which is what you found on the internet refers to).
Does the issue only happen on LTE or at home? My guess is that your DNS configuration on your home router or from you cellphone provider have been modified to use OpenDNS’s (or any other DNS that cause an issue)
Also, could you provide a screenshot of your browser telling you the website isn’t secure?
I’m not connected to Wi-Fi. It’s not getting any data from any routers.
I’m not sure to understand: you can’t connect to WiFi? I would just like to know if this issue only happens on cellular in order to narrow down the causes.
Here’s screen of the error in Firefox.
Correct I’m not able to connect to any wifi here.
Edit: DuckDuckGo won’t even show an error. It just reloads the current page.
do you live in mississippi, virginia, or utah?
I do not.
Why is this relevant?
Pornhub blocks access in Mississippi, Virginia and Utah amid changing laws
Thank you for this, very useful
Good call. That’s the type of thing everyone misses. It doesn’t affect this specific issue but I like how you’re thinking.
Seems like someone (you carrier) or some app is trying to do a Man-in-the-Middle attack. I guess it only happens on this kind of website?
I guess you should start by checking for rogue apps installed on your phone.
I used pornhub just because its easy to search for and recognizable and I knew it would be blocked. Violence is being blocked too. I can’t watch a lot of legit r rated movies because they’re blocked too.
There’s always a router, and there’s always a DNS server. Normally, your device is asking to join a network, and something on that network assigns it an IP address, a DNS server, and a gateway router to use. That’s true whether you’re connecting to WiFi or a cellular network. The difference is just which device is assigning you those things. You can also override that on your side by specifying a static configuration that can break things, but I don’t think that’s your problem.
“Private DNS Mode” here is only referring to whether or not you want to encrypt the DNS lookup traffic. That’s certainly not a bad idea, but it’s a separate issue from whether or not you have a working DNS setup at all. From the screenshot below, it looks like you do have a working DNS configuration. To connect to a server, you type the server’s name (e.g., mobile.pornhub.com), your browser sends a DNS request to your DNS server asking it to return the IP address of that server, and then it uses that IP address to ask the server to send it a web page. You’re getting to the part where you’ve asked the server to send you a web page, but the server is refusing because your browser didn’t make the request over HTTPS (i.e., using encryption).
I don’t know why that is, but I’d try the steps outlined here.