Comment by ahoka 4 months ago Anyone else blocks UDP 80/443 due to privacy concerns? 7 comments ahoka Reply detaro 4 months ago What privacy concern do you have that does not apply to TCP 80/443? ahoka 4 months ago Tracking sessions across different physical connections has some non-trivial privacy implications:https://http3-explained.haxx.se/en/quic/quic-connections#con... NavinF 4 months ago How do you imagine other protocols handle switching physical connections? With HTTP 1, you send your session ID as a cookie after wasting time creating a new TCP connection 2 replies → MallocVoidstar 4 months ago No. frmdstryr 4 months ago Yes, no performance difference either.
detaro 4 months ago What privacy concern do you have that does not apply to TCP 80/443? ahoka 4 months ago Tracking sessions across different physical connections has some non-trivial privacy implications:https://http3-explained.haxx.se/en/quic/quic-connections#con... NavinF 4 months ago How do you imagine other protocols handle switching physical connections? With HTTP 1, you send your session ID as a cookie after wasting time creating a new TCP connection 2 replies →
ahoka 4 months ago Tracking sessions across different physical connections has some non-trivial privacy implications:https://http3-explained.haxx.se/en/quic/quic-connections#con... NavinF 4 months ago How do you imagine other protocols handle switching physical connections? With HTTP 1, you send your session ID as a cookie after wasting time creating a new TCP connection 2 replies →
NavinF 4 months ago How do you imagine other protocols handle switching physical connections? With HTTP 1, you send your session ID as a cookie after wasting time creating a new TCP connection 2 replies →
What privacy concern do you have that does not apply to TCP 80/443?
Tracking sessions across different physical connections has some non-trivial privacy implications:
https://http3-explained.haxx.se/en/quic/quic-connections#con...
How do you imagine other protocols handle switching physical connections? With HTTP 1, you send your session ID as a cookie after wasting time creating a new TCP connection
2 replies →
No.
Yes, no performance difference either.