this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2023
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All well and good, but sadly this relies on the hosts managing DNS to include specific entries in their DNS configuration for keys to use during the encryption process. Unfortunately the vast majority of hosts probably won't be bothered to do this, similar to DNSSEC.
Wouldn't it be better if reverse proxies simply had a "default key" meant to encrypt the SNI after an unencrypted "hello" is received?
Including DNS in this seems weird.
What would stop a MITM attacker from replacing the key? The server can't sign the key if it doesn't know which domain the client is trusting.