Well folks can certainly do what they want to do. And the IETF
has a lamentable record of some protocols that don’t accomplish much. But
the core of this proposed WG is based on a fallacy. ViPR cannot verify or
authenticate the responsible party for a E.164 number. It is incapable of doing
so since there is no possible administrative chain of trust other than self
assertion . Hence the possibility of identity or number/session hijacking
is very large. You have to have the cooperation of the national numbering
authorities or the issuer of the phone number to authenticate who is the
responsible party . ViPR doesn’t change that problem either.
This has been a well known problem in SIP for some time and that
was part of the difficulties that public ENUM had in e164.arpa. ENUM is doing
very well BTW as a SS7/TCAP replacement however in private trees BTW.
Consequently I think this issue has to be fully defined in the
charter and I will gleefully anticipate what the security considerations text
will look like.
The fact that there is CISCO running code is utterly irrelevant.
There is lots of bad code out there. I understand the problem of how do
you create SIP federations across domains outside the scope of service
providers, but without a comprehensive trust model this is going to fail. I
do understand that many folks don’t like their voice service providers or
PSTN that perpetuates the use of E.164 numbers but this proposal is not going
to solve that.
IMHO in the absence of any rational trust or security model you can
certainly publish something as Informational but getting something past the
IESG is another thing entirely.
From: Peter Musgrave
[mailto:peter.musgrave@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Saturday, July 03, 2010 5:49 PM
To: Richard Shockey
Cc: Romascanu, Dan (Dan); Mary Barnes; DISPATCH; IETF-Discussion list
Subject: Re: [dispatch] VIPR - proposed charter version 3
Clearly we don't want to be trying to solve the impossible -
that could take a really long time.
The mechanism in the ViPR drafts seemed to be able to
accomplish the "finding the party responsible for a number" - and
IIRC this is based on *running code* in the Cisco IME.
ViPR is frankly not beautiful (in the way ICE is not
beautiful) but I do think it can solve a problem which needs to be solved.
Hence I support it.
Peter Musgrave
On Sat, Jul 3, 2010 at 2:33 PM, Richard Shockey <richard@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
A we already have centralized solutions for interdomain
routing based on
E.164. its called ENUM in both its private and public instantiations. It
works pretty well BTW and globally deployed.
IMHO this charter is a non starter and should not be approved on the basis
of this statement alone.
"finding domains that claim to be responsible for a given phone
number"
This IMHO is flat out impossible. Validating or authenticating an entity
that is "responsible for a phone number" is as bad as "
who is the carrier
of record" , is a massive rathole. Cullen and Johathan should know better.
Certs? LNP ?
We have this problem of E.164 validation all the time in SIP and its not
going to be solved in the IETF.
-----Original Message-----
From: dispatch-bounces@xxxxxxxx
[mailto:dispatch-bounces@xxxxxxxx]
On Behalf
Of Romascanu, Dan (Dan)
Sent: Wednesday, June 30, 2010 11:33 AM
To: Mary Barnes
Cc: DISPATCH; IETF-Discussion list
Subject: Re: [dispatch] VIPR - proposed charter version 3
It looks to me that one can imagine 'centralized' solutions which are
also based on reusing SIP related functionality developed in RAI. I
would rather not close such an option and allow the WG a window of
opportunity in which alternate solutions that could meet the same goals
can be presented.
Dan
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mary Barnes [mailto:mary.ietf.barnes@xxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, June 30, 2010 6:24 PM
> To: Romascanu, Dan (Dan)
> Cc: DISPATCH; IETF-Discussion list
> Subject: Re: [dispatch] VIPR - proposed charter version 3
>
> Hi Dan,
>
> The term peer to peer is intended to exclude mechanisms that
> would use a central repository for the information: This was
> discussed in an earlier thread:
> http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/dispatch/current/msg02027.html
>
> In one sense it is a solution, however, in another sense it
> is reusing SIP related functionality defined in RAI and thus
> is in a similar vein as specifying the use of SIP in a charter.
>
> Thanks,
> Mary.
>
> On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 5:42 AM, Romascanu, Dan (Dan)
> <dromasca@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> The VIPR WG will address this problem by developing a peer to
peer
> >> based approach to finding domains that claim to be
> responsible for a
> >> given phone number and validation protocols to ensure a
reasonable
> >> likelihood that a given domain actually is responsible for
> the phone
> >> number.
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> > Clarification question. What exactly means 'peer to peer
> based approach'
> > and what kind of approaches are excluded by having this in
> the charter.
> > Does 'approach' mean solution? If so why does a specific type of
> > solution need to be agreed in the charter, while all we
> have at hand
> > at this point are individual contribution I-Ds that describe the
> > 'problem statement and some possible starting points for solutions'?
> >
> > Thanks and Regards,
> >
> > Dan
> >
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: dispatch-bounces@xxxxxxxx
> >> [mailto:dispatch-bounces@xxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Mary Barnes
> >> Sent: Monday, June 28, 2010 8:38 PM
> >> To: DISPATCH
> >> Subject: [dispatch] VIPR - proposed charter version 3
> >>
> >
>
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