Solved! Go to Solution.
The next most popular (after Google's) is probably OpenDNS. A lot of people use it.
I belive that OpenDNS also offers some customizable filtering options with "OpenDNS Home", though you don't have to do any of that and you can just use their DNS.
It won't affect communications with the satellite or anything like that. Actually, quite a few people with HughesNet use an alternate DNS, with Google's being the most prominent. It looks like Cloudflare's secondary/alternate DNS is 1.0.0.1, so you'd want to use 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1 for the primary and secondary, respectively.
Hope it works well. 🙂
Edit: I defer to Mark's reply below. He knows better than I.
Recommend you do not do that just yet, but not for what you might think.
I provide tech support to a web site that uses CloudFlare as a content distribution network (CDN). Periodically we get complaints from site users (mostly on weekends) of getting redirected to real sketchy sites (claiming to be Amazon -related, "you've won a prize", etc.), even after we've disabled all of the on-site ads and refreshed the DNS caches. The only conclusion, although impossible to prove, is that it may be coming from CloudFlare's DNS itself - possibly something residual from when they were hacked a while back.
Use at your own risk.
The next most popular (after Google's) is probably OpenDNS. A lot of people use it.
I belive that OpenDNS also offers some customizable filtering options with "OpenDNS Home", though you don't have to do any of that and you can just use their DNS.
You're very welcome. 🙂
@infinitytecwrote:
Since CloudFlare's DNS is potentially dangerous
That's just the thing, "potentially". Really don't know for sure. In theory, could also be a wayward WP plugin doing this (site owner sometimes just installs stuff to try out), but that's doubtful.