But your endpoints are already available to everyone with just a nslookup.
Maybe it’s more the permanent history of that, so if you run something like “radarr.example.com” then you wouldn’t have plausible deniability if you’re sued and the CT logs are presented as proof of your wrongdoing
But your endpoints are already available to everyone with just a nslookup.
Maybe it’s more the permanent history of that, so if you run something like “radarr.example.com” then you wouldn’t have plausible deniability if you’re sued and the CT logs are presented as proof of your wrongdoing
Not if you use wildcard dns records.