Jester 5 Posted ... I was reading up on the Network Lock, trying to discover why it would not work on my comptuer. I am running win7/ComodoFirewall. I found my answer in that it is a plugin for Win Firewall, which I do not use. So now that I found my answer, no worries. Then I cam across DNS Leaks and such, I decided to see if I was "Leaking". I was very surprised to see that Chrome was indeed leaking. So I followed the steps to stop Firefox from leaking, and am now safer for it. So, thank you all, for the advice. I am safer and mroe free now than I was an hour ago. 2 OpenSourcerer and rickjames reacted to this Quote Share this post Link to post
jacklance 0 Posted ... I did a DNS leak test on my connection and noticed my ISP's DNS appearing in the results. Not always, but often enough that I was concerned. Despite my router using DD-WRT was set to use Google DNS it kept popping up.I double checked my settings in my router. DNS 1 was 8.8.8.8, DNS 2 was 8.8.4.4, and DNS 3 was 0.0.0.0. However, when I went to Status ->WAN screen, the three DNS servers showing were the Google ones and one from my ISP. So I added an OpenDNS IP to my 3rd DNS slot and haven't had any problems since. Make sure you fill in all of your DNS spots with a preferred server or your router/computer may get one for you. Quote Share this post Link to post
st4r 1 Posted ... maybe it's solved already but also check if your ISP supports IPv6 and your network adapter is configured to it as well. I thought I had everything in place and couldn't explain to myself why I was leaking till I discovered that the ISP I was using had IPv6 support and leaked my IP in the background.I disabled IPv6 in my network adapter preferences and plugged the DNS leak with this. Quote Share this post Link to post