Mozilla
Menu
  • About Mozilla
  • Products
  • Give
  • Discover Firefox

Open Policy & Advocacy

Mozilla's official blog on open Internet policy initiatives and developments

  • Explore
  • Categories
Categories: Uncategorized
Share:
  • Twitter

DoH Comment Period Responses

Mozilla
June 10, 2021

Mozilla received the following comments (in chronological order) as a response to the public comment period on its DNS over HTTPS (DoH) and Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) deployment between November 19, 2020 and January 20 2021.

—

  1. Jeroen Jacobs
  2. Tim Lewis
  3. Olaf Beckman Lapr
  4. Malle Eppie
  5. Raphaël Barrois
  6. V Parla
  7. Christof Meerwald
  8. Jason Livingood
  9. Name Redacted Upon Request
  10. Matthijs Tijink
  11. Maarten Veerman
  12. Joshua Hudson
  13. Jedediah Crary
  14. Paul Fedele
  15. John Bashinski
  16. Richard Shetron
  17. Falzer B
  18. Martin Millnert
  19. Matt Corallo
  20. Greg Adams (LightVU)
  21. Bas Penris
  22. Jon Duncan
  23. Fred Trotter
  24. datahunter
  25. Paul Vixie
  26. Jonathan Eddy
  27. Prostasia Foundation
  28. European Telecommunications Network Operators (ETNO)
  29. Richard Neill
  30. Fernando Gont
  31. Rene Vargo
  32. Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) CTO – David Conrad
  33. Martin Hunek
  34. Stephen Farrell
  35. CIS India
  36. Internet Service Providers and Connectivity Providers Constituency (ISPCP) at ICANN
  37. Deutsche Telekom AG
  38. John Carr
  39. Article 19
  40. Nominet
  41. Open-Xchange
  42. Andrew Campling
  43. Opendium
  44. SWITCH-CERT
  45. Vodafone
  46. Derechos Digitales
  47. Internet Services Providers’ Association (ISPA) UK
  48. BT Group
  49. ICANN Business Constituency
  50. Open Technology Institute (OTI)
  51. Access Now
  52. Verisign
  53. Enock Mbewe
  54. Internet Watch Foundation (IWF)
  55. Cloudflare
  56. Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT)
  57. Open Rights Group (ORG)

Previous article The Van Buren decision is a strong step forward for public interest research online June 4, 2021

Next article Working in the open: Enhancing privacy and security in the DNS June 10, 2021

More articles in “Uncategorized”

  • Pathways to a fairer digital world: Mozilla shares views on the EU Digital Fairness Act
    October 31, 2025
  • California’s Opt Me Out Act is a Win for Privacy
    October 29, 2025
  • Mozilla Meetup: “The Future of Competition: How to Save the Open Web”
    September 9, 2025
  • Is Germany on the Brink of Banning Ad Blockers? User Freedom, Privacy, and Security Is At Risk.
    August 14, 2025
  • Open by Design: How Nations Can Compete in the Age of AI
    July 30, 2025

Recent articles

  • Behind the Manifesto: The Survivors of the Open Web
    November 12, 2025
  • Pathways to a fairer digital world: Mozilla shares views on the EU Digital Fairness Act
    October 31, 2025
  • California’s Opt Me Out Act is a Win for Privacy
    October 29, 2025
  • Behind the Manifesto: Standing up for encryption to keep the internet safe
    October 21, 2025
  • Mozilla Meetup: “The Future of Competition: How to Save the Open Web”
    September 9, 2025

Love the Web?

Get the Mozilla newsletter and help us keep it open and free.

We will only send you Mozilla-related information.

Thanks!

If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an e-mail from us.

More Mozilla Blogs

  • The Mozilla Blog
  • The Firefox Frontier
  • Internet Citizen
  • about:community
  • Mozilla Hacks

More articles

  • privacy
  • Uncategorized
  • Trust
  • Security
  • Europe
  • Transparency
  • Data protection
  • United States

privacy

  • California’s Opt Me Out Act is a Win for Privacy
    October 29, 2025
  • Behind the Manifesto: Standing up for encryption to keep the internet safe
    October 21, 2025
  • Mozilla shares 2025 Policy Priorities and Recommendations for Creating an Internet Where Everyone Can Thrive
    March 27, 2025
  • Mozilla Joins Amicus Brief in Support of Law That Protects Your Private Messages
    February 24, 2025
  • How Lawmakers Can Help People Take Control of Their Privacy
    October 10, 2024

Uncategorized

  • Pathways to a fairer digital world: Mozilla shares views on the EU Digital Fairness Act
    October 31, 2025
  • California’s Opt Me Out Act is a Win for Privacy
    October 29, 2025
  • Mozilla Meetup: “The Future of Competition: How to Save the Open Web”
    September 9, 2025
  • Is Germany on the Brink of Banning Ad Blockers? User Freedom, Privacy, and Security Is At Risk.
    August 14, 2025
  • Open by Design: How Nations Can Compete in the Age of AI
    July 30, 2025

Trust

  • Continuing to Protect our Users in Kazakhstan
    December 18, 2020

Security

  • Continuing to Protect our Users in Kazakhstan
    December 18, 2020
  • It’s time for the G20’s first digital agenda
    February 2, 2018

Europe

  • Mozilla Mornings: Unleashing PETs – Regulating Online Ads for a Privacy-First Future
    March 31, 2025
  • Mozilla provides feedback to ACM’s DSA Guidelines
    April 8, 2024
  • Global Network Fee Proposals are Troubling. Here are Three Paths Forward.
    October 26, 2023
  • Mozilla Mornings on addressing online harms through advertising transparency
    October 19, 2020
  • The EU’s Current Approach to QWACs (Qualified Website Authentication Certificates) will Undermine Security on the Open Web
    October 8, 2020

Transparency

  • The EU’s AI Act at One Year: Continuing to push for open-source AI and transparency
    August 11, 2025
  • Mozilla Participates to Ofcom’s Draft Transparency Reporting Guidance
    October 23, 2024
  • Mozilla applauds CFPB for taking on the Data Broker Ecosystem
    August 18, 2023
  • Mozilla Weighs in on Accountability Legislation: Public policies like PATA can help to keep the Internet in the public’s best interest.
    June 9, 2023
  • Open Fibre Data Standard: Understanding the True Extent of the Internet
    March 28, 2023

Data protection

  • Mozilla submits comments to the California Privacy Protection Agency
    November 11, 2021

United States

  • Mozilla shares 2025 Policy Priorities and Recommendations for Creating an Internet Where Everyone Can Thrive
    March 27, 2025
  • Mozilla Respond to the White House’s RFI on AI
    March 24, 2025
  • Mozilla Responds to BIS’ Proposed Rule on Reporting Requirements for the Development of Advanced AI Models and Computing Clusters
    October 21, 2024
  • Mozilla, EleutherAI, and Hugging Face Provide Comments on California’s SB 1047
    August 19, 2024
  • How the U.S. Government is leading by example on artificial intelligence
    March 28, 2024
Mozilla
Mozilla
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
    • Twitter (@mozilla)
    • Instagram (@mozillagram)
Firefox
  • Download Firefox
  • Desktop
  • Mobile
  • Features
  • Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition
    • Twitter (@firefox)
    • YouTube (firefoxchannel)
  • Website Privacy Notice
  • Cookies
  • Legal

Visit Mozilla Corporation’s not-for-profit parent, the Mozilla Foundation.

Portions of this content are ©1998-2025 by individual contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license.