Selfhosted
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I've had my own domain since the early 2000s and have never needed to run a public dns server. Couldn't, in fact, due to not having a static ip address. Sure, I run one internally but it's complicated enough to setup "properly" that I leave the external resolution to the big players. I doubt anyone's home setup will be more reliable than route53...
Commercial dns services are cheap as chips and make it easy to add records. You can often automate it with terraform or sensible as well. I can't think of any good reason not to use one.
And I explicitly said "unless you want to rely on a big player".
Personally I'm very fed up with AWS, Cloudflare and Google virtually owning the modern Internet. I selfhost to get away from their spying and oligopoly so routing DNS through them is simply out of the question, for me.
And really it's not that hard these days with pre-packaged Docker containers. I have a fairly complex setup and while I have put hours into it it wasn't rocket surgery by any means. It's also quite healthy to understand how DNS actually works if you work with the Web imo.
I get that - but part of the reason for the current situation is that DNS is such a bad protocol that is risky to leave in unskilled hands. You can do damage beyond just your host. DNS is a big target and servers can find themselves participating in DDOS attacks. The big players do traffic analysis and rate limiting to minimize these things.
It's not that it's "hard to run a name server" it's that it's tricky to configure one correctly so as to be a "good neighbor" on the internet. Most homegamers only need a single "A" record anyway - maybe some CNAMEs. It's not like you need anything complicated. And if you don't have a static IP address then you definitely want your DNS server to be updatable easily with a new IP. Updating NS records is more complicated.
Running an internal name server is fine and a great experience. You can do so much more on your own network than you would likely do with a public name server anyway.
Only doing resolution for your own domain and dnssec solve pretty much all those issues and is pretty darn easy.
And I did say that the web gui is what you need to lock down, DNS has no vulnerabilities exploitable through port 53 that lets an attacker take control of the server.
You're saying "If you configure your DNS server properly and understand how it works then it can be setup securely."
I'm saying "Have you seen the questions in this community???"
... Touché