> This will only increase the massive amount of data that Cloudflare gets about people's online behavior
No, it explicitly won't.
Mozilla has a strong Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) policy in place that forbids CloudFlare or any other DoH partner from collecting personal identifying information. To mitigate this risk, our partners are contractually bound to adhere to this policy.
Which sounds nice in theory, but there are the usual legal exceptions:
> The resolver must not retain, sell, or transfer to any third party (except as may be required by law) any personal information, IP addresses or other user identifiers, or user query patterns from the DNS queries sent from the Firefox browser.
> Transparency Report. There must be a transparency report published at least yearly that documents the policy for how the party operating the resolver will handle law enforcement requests for user data and that documents the types and number of requests received and answered, except to the extent such disclosure is prohibited by law.
> The party operating the resolver should not by default block or filter domains unless specifically required by law in the jurisdiction in which the resolver operates.
This doesn't really matter if you live in the US, but most of us don't.
No, it explicitly won't.
Mozilla has a strong Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) policy in place that forbids CloudFlare or any other DoH partner from collecting personal identifying information. To mitigate this risk, our partners are contractually bound to adhere to this policy.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-dns-over-https