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Posted
4 hours ago, Andy95W said:

This works for me, for whatever reason I don’t have a clue about.

WOW!

That works for me, as well!  Private browsing on Safari on my iPhone and no problem accessing Mooneyspace!  I immediately went back to normal mode and got the 'server not found' error.

  • Like 1
Posted
21 minutes ago, MikeOH said:

Private browsing on Safari on my iPhone and no problem accessing Mooneyspace!  I immediately went back to normal mode and got the 'server not found' error.

Hmmm . . . No fruit phone or tablet, but Chrome has no trouble for me . . .

Must be the iOs.

Posted
14 minutes ago, Hank said:

Hmmm . . . No fruit phone or tablet, but Chrome has no trouble for me . . .

Must be the iOs.

Do you have Verizon? If not then you won’t see the issue. It has nothing to do with Apple.

  • Like 1
Posted
27 minutes ago, Hank said:

Hmmm . . . No fruit phone or tablet, but Chrome has no trouble for me . . .

Must be the iOs.

Your logic is flawed if you do not have Verizon; this isn't a 'fruit' problem.

Posted
12 hours ago, N201MKTurbo said:

I’m having the same issue. It started last weekend. I cannot get Mooneyspace on any of my devices using Verizon WI-FI. This includes my IPad, 2 work computers, and my personal computer.

My wife discovered that you can get it on the IPAD in private browsing mode. 
 

It works fine if I turn off WIFI. My mobile is T-Mobile. My Wi-Fi is Verizon.

I thought it was just me. I’m sort of glad it is happening to others. I will call Verizon and bitch.

Wait a second, your wife fixed your Mooneyspace for you?!! I have questions…

  • Haha 1
Posted

You guys are late to the party!  I was having this issue on my home (centurylink) internet two weeks ago. Exact symptoms! However, my TmObile cell was working fine.  I changed the dns to the google free 8.8.4.4 and all was resolved.

Changing the dns of your verizon cell service might be a tad more complicated…

Posted

The confirmed solution to this problem on iPhone/iPad is as follows:

  1. Turn on "Airplane mode";
  2. Wait for about 30 seconds; then
  3. Turn off "Airplane mode".

(For geeks, this flushes the DNS cache as a byproduct.)

Afterwards, you should be good to go.

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, SoccerCA said:

The confirmed solution to this problem on iPhone/iPad is as follows:

  1. Turn on "Airplane mode";
  2. Wait for about 30 seconds; then
  3. Turn off "Airplane mode".

(For geeks, this flushes the DNS cache as a byproduct.)

Afterwards, you should be good to go.

That didn’t work for me. It may work if you are using Verizon cell service. I have T-Mobile cell service and Verizon WiFi.

Posted
On 11/8/2025 at 11:31 PM, Ragsf15e said:

You guys are late to the party!  I was having this issue on my home (centurylink) internet two weeks ago. Exact symptoms! However, my TmObile cell was working fine.  I changed the dns to the google free 8.8.4.4 and all was resolved.

Changing the dns of your verizon cell service might be a tad more complicated…


 I really wouldn’t use googles DNS, with google your data is the product and they’ll sell it to the highest bidder or fall over themselves to give it to gov.  
 

 Some good no logs DNSs from proton, Nord, etc

  • Like 1
Posted
1 hour ago, SoccerCA said:

For geeks, this flushes the DNS cache as a byproduct.

If it were only that simple with ALL of my devices! :lol:

Posted

I can no longer get here on either phone or tablet unless I VPN. Right now I’m connecting through Mexico and it works fine. No bueno without VPN for me.

  • Haha 1
Posted

On IPad, go to your WiFi connection in settings.

Click on the circle i icon.

Scroll down to Configure DNS and click.

Switch to manual.

Delete all the servers and add 1.1.1.1 or your favorite DNS server.

Click Save at the top.

Everything should work now. 

Posted
9 minutes ago, RoundTwo said:

I can no longer get here on either phone or tablet unless I VPN. Right now I’m connecting through Mexico and it works fine. No bueno without VPN for me.

I don’t think the VPN is what is fixing it, The VPN is probably giving you a different DNS server.

Posted
30 minutes ago, Fly Boomer said:

Are you thinking of VPN?


 

“NordVPN offers private DNS in its apps, which ensures tighter security and privacy for your traffic. The NordVPN native applications automatically use NordVPN's DNS servers when connected to VPN. This prevents DNS leaksduring your VPN connection, ensuring that your NordVPN private DNS requests are safe.

NordVPN's DNS server addresses are 103.86.96.100 and 103.86.99.100. Learn how to change NordVPN DNS servers (more on it later).

 

Why use NordVPN DNS servers?

DNS servers translate human-friendly domain names such as www.google.com into IP addresses like 192.168.1.1 so your device can connect to websites. When you type a website address, your device asks a DNS server for the IP address. If the server doesn’t know it, it looks it up from other servers. Changing DNS servers provides you with increased security as well as speed. With default DNS you may be subject to DNS hijacking. DNS hijacking is a cyberattack where attackers redirect or alter DNS settings to send users to fake websites or malicious servers. This can lead to phishing, malware infections, data theft, or blocking access to legitimate sites. It often occurs through router vulnerabilities or malware. “
 

Good write up on diffrent DNS, also goes into the censorship some of these DNS unfortunately use, unknown to most of their users 

 

https://old.reddit.com/r/nordvpn/comments/12azz99/best_dns_servers_to_use_with_nordvpn/?rdt=35616

  • Thanks 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Jackk said:

Good write up on diffrent DNS, also goes into the censorship some of these DNS unfortunately use, unknown to most of their users 

 

https://old.reddit.com/r/nordvpn/comments/12azz99/best_dns_servers_to_use_with_nordvpn/?rdt=35616

That actually had some good points. 

One practical point (besides the main privacy point) is that if you use VPN you might have the VPN's DNS (they use Nord as an example) redirect you to sites that will be higher-performance. 

I suppose a meta-issue here is that DNS is no longer the 'transparent' resolver system it was in the genesis of the net. 

  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, Jackk said:

This prevents DNS leaksduring your VPN connection, ensuring that your NordVPN private DNS requests are safe.

Thanks, I never knew that could be a problem.  I guess I need to do some research on my VPN.  I have no idea what DNS servers I'm using.

  • Like 1
Posted
7 minutes ago, dkkim73 said:

I suppose a meta-issue here is that DNS is no longer the 'transparent' resolver system it was in the genesis of the net. 

I too learned something here.

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