<div dir="ltr"><div>I have the domain in google domains, want to switch to their cloud DNS hosting.<br></div><div>What google says in the page,<br></div><br><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1">
<h2 class="gmail-text-headline gmail-l-pad-top-1" id="gmail-100-availability-and-low-latency">100% Availability and Low Latency</h2>
<p class="gmail-text-body">
Use Google’s infrastructure for <strong>production quality, high volume authoritative
DNS serving</strong>. Your users will have reliable, low-latency access to Google’s
infrastructure from anywhere in the world using our network of Anycast name servers.
Our SLA promises 100% availability of our Authoritative Name Servers.
</p>
</div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1"><br></div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1">But the gov here (china) mostly blocks Google's service including DNS.</div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1">Since the service is most likely unavaliable in China, their ToS statement is not correct enough.<br></div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1"><br></div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1">Isn't it?<br></div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1"><br></div><div class="gmail-l-showcase-content gmail-l-pad-left-30 gmail-l-pad-top-1">regards.<br></div></div>