A new IETF working group has been proposed in the Security Area. The IESG has not made any determination as yet. The following draft charter was submitted, and is provided for informational purposes only. Please send your comments to the IESG mailing list (iesg@ietf.org) by Tuesday, November 7, 2010 Keys In DNS (kidns) ----------------------- Last modified: 2010-10-25 Current status: Proposed Working Group Chairs: Warren Kumari <warren@kumari.net> Ondrej Sury <ondrej.sury@nic.cz> Security Area Directors: Sean Turner <turners@ieca.com> Tim Polk <tim.polk@nist.gov> Security Area Advisor: Tim Polk <tim.polk@nist.gov> Mailing Lists: General Discussion: keyassure@ietf.org To Subscribe: https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/keyassure Archive: http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/keyassure/current/maillist.html Objective: Specify mechanisms and techniques that allow Internet applications to establish cryptographically secured communications by using information distributed through the DNS and authenticated using DNSSEC to obtain public keys which are associated with a service located at a domain name. Problem Statement: Entities on the Internet are usually identified using domain names and forming a cryptographically secured connection to the entity requires the entity to authenticate its name. For instance, in HTTPS, a server responding to a query for <https://www.example.com> is expected to authenticate as "www.example.com". Security protocols such as TLS and IPsec accomplish this authentication by allowing an endpoint to prove ownership of a private key whose corresponding public key is somehow bound to the name being authenticated. As a pre-requisite for authentication, then, these protocols require a mechanism for bindings to be asserted between public keys and domain names. DNSSEC provides a mechanism for a domain operator to sign DNS information directly, using keys that are bound to the domain by the parent domain; relying parties can continue this chain up to any trust anchor that they accept. In this way, bindings of keys to domains are asserted not by external entities, but by the entities that operate the DNS. In addition, this technique inherently limits the scope of any given entity to the names in zones he controls. This working group will develop mechanisms for domain operators to present bindings between names within their control and public keys, in such a way that these bindings can be integrity-protected (and thus shown to be authentically from the domain operator) using DNSSEC and used as a basis for authentication in protocols that use domain names as identifiers. Possible starting points for these deliverables include draft-hallambaker-certhash, draft-hoffman-keys-linkage-from-dns, and draft-josefsson-keyassure-tls. The mechanisms developed by this group will address bindings between domain names and keys, allowing flexibility for all key-transport mechanisms supported by the application protocols addressed (e.g., both self-signed and CA-issued certificates for use in TLS). The group may also create documents that describe how protocol entities can discover and validate these bindings in the execution of specific applications. This work would be done in coordination with the IETF Working Groups responsible for the protocols. Milestones: Dec 2010 First WG draft of standards-track protocol for using DNS to associate hosts with keys for TLS and DTLS Jan 2011 First WG draft of standards-track protocols for using DNS to associate hosts with IPsec Jun 2011 Protocol for using DNS to associate domain names with keys for TLS and DTLS to IESG Aug 2011 Protocols for using DNS to associate domain names with keys for IPsec to IESG Aug 2011 Recharter _______________________________________________ IETF-Announce mailing list IETF-Announce@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf-announce