> Google’s response also appears to go against the advice of the Belgian court, which required the DNS providers to redirect users to a dedicated page, presumably to provide further detail.
That advice made sense in the plain-text HTTP era, but it's not longer viable; attempting to do that nowadays would only lead to an "invalid certificate" error page. The only ones which can make that work are the site itself, or a CDN in front of it (which, as others have noted, often means cloudflare can do that, but not other DNS providers like google).
That advice made sense in the plain-text HTTP era, but it's not longer viable; attempting to do that nowadays would only lead to an "invalid certificate" error page. The only ones which can make that work are the site itself, or a CDN in front of it (which, as others have noted, often means cloudflare can do that, but not other DNS providers like google).