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Comment by Hamuko

3 years ago

Isn't the need to protect your DNS infrastructure pretty obvious anyways even when ignoring certificate validation?

Besides, if I can change your DNS, I can change your HTTP responses as well. So control over DNS already lets me get a lets-encrypt cert for you anyway. Though it is slightly easier to notice if someone changes your DNS to point to a different server than if someone adds a TXT record. I say slightly because if I change your DNS to point at my server I can just proxy requests to your old server so everything still looks like it works.

Heck, even with most other certificate issuers I can get a cert in similar ways when controlling DNS.

  • How often do one monitor their zone files and its updates?

    Would you be able to catch new subdomains being created under your watch?