The IESG has approved following documents: - 'Common Presence and Instant Messaging: Message Format ' <draft-ietf-impp-cpim-msgfmt-08.txt> as a Proposed Standard - 'Presence Information Data Format (PIDF) ' <draft-ietf-impp-cpim-pidf-08.txt> as a Proposed Standard - 'Common Profile for Presence (CPP) ' <draft-ietf-impp-pres-03.txt> as a Proposed Standard - 'Common Profile for Instant Messaging (CPIM) ' <draft-ietf-impp-im-03.txt> as a Proposed Standard - 'Address Resolution for Instant Messaging and Presence ' <draft-ietf-impp-srv-03.txt> as a Proposed Standard These documents are products of the Instant Messaging and Presence Protocol Working Group. The IESG contact persons are Ted Hardie and Ned Freed. Technical Summary These documents form the basis for a mechanism by which multiple distinct Instant Messaging applications may pass messages among the different systems while retaining the ability to use end-to-end encryption, integrity protection, and a shared framework for presence information. The work on PIDF (Presence Information Data Format) is already in widespread usage by the SIP-based instant messaging community, as is the message format described. Working Group Summary The IMPP working group was originally chartered to develop requirements and then protocols which would provide an "Internet-scale end-user presence awareness, notification and instant messaging system". The group delivered RFCs 2778 and 2779 defining a model and requirements for instant messaging, but it was unable to select among the candidate protocols for this task even after setting up a nine-member design and review team. After this impasse was reached, the work of development was split to allow for multiple, interoperable transport protocols. While the tasks assigned to those groups chartered after the split are relatively clear in their charters, the work to be done by IMPP was, regrettably, not defined in a new charter. As a result, the task taken on by these documents represents the rough consensus of the group as determined by the chairs; there remains, however, a view that the group was chartered to define minimal gateway semantics for the multiple IM systems, thus rendering end-to-end encryption and data integrity out of scope, rather than the formats and framework defined by these documents. In evaluating these documents, the IESG has thus both needed to assess whether the documents meet the needs of the work plan as the chairs have understood it and whether the work plan itself was on target. The IESG greatly regrets the necessity of this second task and its failure in not updating the charter of IMPP. It does not, however, believe that refusin to advance the documents on the basis of this failure is appropriate, as it is contrary to the promotion of interoperability in this arena. Instead, the IESG has been guided by the charters granted to the successor groups, by the place end-to-end security normally holds in IETF protocol analyses, and by a careful review of the mailing list and minutes of the meetings subsequent to the split. The IESG has, through this review, concluded that the work plan described by the chairs was on target and has conducted their technical review of the documents solely on the question of whether the documents meet the need outlined by that plan. In its technical evaluation, the IESG noted that many of the formats and discovery mechanisms described are already in use or replicate well-known existing mechanism. They reflect that maturity in their description and completeness. The core document on CPIM, in contrast, represents a fairl abstract description of the service. The IESG believes that the documents ar of sufficient quality to be the basis of an interoperable service, but notes that it expects the development of documents mapping CPIM to specific protocols to show how to make the abstract terms in CPIM concrete. Further, it expects that interoperability reports presented for the transition to draft standard woul include multiple protocols, as well as the usual requirement that the implementations be independent. Protocol Quality The documents were reviewed for the IESG by Ted Hardie. Dear RFC-Editor: Please make the following changes in draft-ietf-impp-cpim-msgfmt-08.txt thanks, Ted Hardie Section 3.6 OLD: ; Any US-ASCII char except ".", CTLs o SEPARATORS: NAMECHAR = %21 / %23-27 / %2a-2b / %2d / %5e-60 / %7c / %7e / ALPHA / DIGIT NEW: ; Any US-ASCII char except ".", CTLs o SEPARATORS: NAMECHAR = %x21 / %x23-27 / %x2a-2b / %x2d / %x5e-60 / %x7c / %x7e / ALPHA / DIGIT OLD: SEPARATORS = "(" / ")" / "<" / ">" / "@" ; 28/29/3c/3e/40 / "," / ";" / ":" / "" / <"> ; 2c/3b/3a/5c/22 / "/" / "[" / "]" / "?" / "=" ; 2f/5b/5d/3f/3d / "{" / "}" / SP ; 7b/7d/20 NEW: SEPARATORS = "(" / ")" / "<" / ">" / "@" ; 28/29/3c/3e/40 / "," / ";" / ":" / "" / %x22 ; 2c/3b/3a/5c/22 / "/" / "[" / "]" / "?" / "=" ; 2f/5b/5d/3f/3d / "{" / "}" / SP ; 7b/7d/20 OLD: From-header = "From" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" NEW: From-header = "From" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" ; "From" is case-sensitive OLD: To-header = "To" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" NEW: To-header = "To" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" ; "To" is case-sensitive OLD: Cc-header = "cc" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" NEW: Cc-header = "cc" ": " [ Formal-name ] "<" URI ">" ; "cc" is case-sensitive OLD: DateTime-header = "DateTime" ": " date-time NEW: DateTime-header = "DateTime" ": " date-time ; "DateTime" is case-sensitive OLD: Subject-header = "Subject" ":" [ ";" lang-param ] SP *HEADERCHAR NEW: Subject-header = "Subject" ":" [ ";" lang-param ] SP *HEADERCHAR ; "Subject" is case-sensitive OLD: NS-header = "NS" ": " [ Name-prefix ] "<" URI ">" NEW: NS-header = "NS" ": " [ Name-prefix ] "<" URI ">" ; "NS" is case-sensitive OLD: Require-header = "Require" ": " Header-name *( "," Header-name ) NEW: Require-header = "Require" ": " Header-name *( "," Header-name ) ; "Require" is case-sensitive Section 4.5: OLD: Subject-header = "Subject" ":" [ ";" lang-param ] SP *HEADERCHAR NEW: Subject-header = "Subject" ":" [ ";" Lang-param ] SP *HEADERCHAR