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Is it possible to configure the ns-server of a domain so that the domain is not available in a certain country?
Hello!
There is a certain site (it’s not the point of the address for the question, so I’m not giving it) and for some time now (the owner of the site allegedly moved to a new server, but since the situation has been observed for more than six months, it’s not about updating the DNS) it stopped working normally open in browser. This gives a message that the domain was not found. The nslookup command does show that the domain is not defined. However, if you call a command like:
nslookup domain name 8.8.8.8,
then the domain address is normally determined (that is, everything is fine through Google's ns-server). Through the Tor browser, the site also opens normally (usually through European countries).
Hence the question - how can this be? Is it possible to somehow configure the domain zone so that the domain is available all over the world, but not in some segment of the Internet? Interested in the fundamental possibility itself, and if the answer is "yes", then by what means can you make sure that some domain is configured in this way?
If the answer is "no" and it's some kind of configuration error, then tell me which one? What to search?
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No
it looks like there is a problem with the local dns
try to go to the desired site through an anonymous proxy or from another place / provider / home / work / friend
The problem is most likely in the settings of the local DNS or the DNS of your Internet provider. This can happen with blocking as well.
You can set it so that a certain site is not available in a certain country. True DNS has nothing to do with it. And as a rule, what does the state have to do with blocking certain sites. China, Russia, various Arab countries... Blocking is carried out by providers and it is clear that through an anonymizer that connects from, say, America, the site will open.
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