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August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Specifying Media Privacy Requirements in SIP Ron Shacham Henning Schulzrinne Dept. of Computer.

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Presentation on theme: "August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Specifying Media Privacy Requirements in SIP Ron Shacham Henning Schulzrinne Dept. of Computer."— Presentation transcript:

1 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Specifying Media Privacy Requirements in SIP Ron Shacham Henning Schulzrinne {hgs,rs2194}@cs.columbia.edu Dept. of Computer Science Columbia University

2 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Overview Motivation: Speakerphones, output devices and session mobility can compromise a call participant’s privacy. Unauthorized recording. Goals: Allow users to specify privacy demanded from the other device; whether recording of the session is allowed; at call setup and anytime during the call. Scope: While a device may be unable to enforce requirements, they provide clear indication of intent similar to GEOPRIV embedded handling instructions (distribution and retention)

3 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Applications Proxy only routes the call to a device that has the right level of privacy Disallow the other call participant from transferring the call to a public device, turning on his speakerphone, or recording the call Force the other participant’s device to retrieve the session from a public device when the conversation becomes more private

4 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Privacy Definitions Privacy levels 1 = only device user may access the media 2 = anyone in the device user’s organization (school, company, circle of friends, etc.) may access the media 3 = anyone may access the media A device may have multiple privacy levels, based on different settings: A phone has level 1 when the receiver Is used, level 2 when speakerphone is used. Privacy levels of a device may change based on its surroundings: If nobody else is in the room, even speakerphone has level 1, but when somebody walks in, it changes to level 2 or level 3.

5 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Protocol Extensions—Caller Preferences New feature preference: privacy Accept-Contact: *;privacy=1;require causes the proxy server to only route the call to a device on which only the user can view or hear The device must respect this level of privacy (e.g., no speakerphone or transfer to a public device) for the duration of the call, unless it is updated through SDP mechanism

6 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Protocol Extensions—SDP Attributes Session-level attributes only May be used at call setup or in mid-call re-INVITE Privacy “a=required-privacy:user” demands that the other device not make media available to anyone besides the user “a=provided-privacy:user” expresses that no other user has access to the media When “required-privacy” is used in an offer, the answer must include the “provided-privacy” attribute with a value within the required range. The device must respect this level for the duration of the call, unless it is updated. Recording “a=norecord” disallows recording of the session When used in an offer, answer must also contain this attribute value.

7 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Extension: preconditions Use SIP preconditions to establish mutually acceptable media privacy Is this sufficiently useful to be implemented?

8 August 2005IETF 63 - SIPPING Open Issues Useful enough? Need “Require” header to ensure that old systems don’t unintentionally pretend that they are honoring the media privacy request “Privacy”  “Sharing”?


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