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Who’s watching your network The IETF standards process and OpenPGP Jon Callas 8 October 1998.

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Presentation on theme: "Who’s watching your network The IETF standards process and OpenPGP Jon Callas 8 October 1998."— Presentation transcript:

1 Who’s watching your network The IETF standards process and OpenPGP Jon Callas 8 October 1998

2 Who’s watching your network The IETF Internet Engineering Task Force An International community of people concerned with the evolution of Internet Standards Made of Working Groups – Each WG has a chartered scope – Official work done on mailing lists – Three meetings per year

3 Who’s watching your network The IETF Working groups in Areas – General, Internet, Applications, Operations and Management, Security, Routing, Transport, User Services Each Area has an Area Director ADs form the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG)

4 Who’s watching your network The IETF Areas are overseen by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) IAB and IESG are chartered by The Internet Society (ISOC) ISOC is a non-profit professional society Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) assigns constants, parameters, etc. Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)

5 Who’s watching your network The Tao of the IETF The IETF is a controlled anarchy There is no membership – If you are on a WG mailing list, or attend a meeting, or contribute in any way, you’re as close to a member as there is. – IETF contributions come from people, not corporations

6 Who’s watching your network BOFs Birds of a Feather Sessions – Essentially proto-working groups – Can meet only twice, and then never again – Closely related concept -- The Bar BOF

7 Who’s watching your network RFC Request For Comments – Essentially IETF standards Many are pseudo-standards Pseudo-standards are nonetheless important – Drafts of RFCs are called Internet Drafts Have a life of 6 months – RFC 2223, Instructions to Authors, tells how to write an RFC

8 Who’s watching your network RFC Informational – Anyone can create one, no review required – IETF pseudo-standards – Many are reprints of other documents – Tradition of April Fools RFCs Many of these are only half jokes

9 Who’s watching your network RFC Standards Track – Created by Working Groups – Detailed Process for Approval Proposed Standard, Draft Standard, Standard – Standards get an STD number, which is a handle

10 Who’s watching your network RFC FYI – Have their own FYI numbers, like STDs Best Practices Experimental

11 Who’s watching your network Other considerations Intellectual Property Considerations – Patented technologies are forbidden from being MUSTs unless there is an alternative – Munich doctrine as applied to crypto – Patents have caused much havoc in the Security area

12 Who’s watching your network Writing an RFC Read RFC2223, 2119, STD1 Arcane format – I use Tim Dierk’s Perl program to format Find a working group to support you, or go informational Or start your own WG

13 Who’s watching your network OpenPGP Standards Track Working Group Has two main goals – OpenPGP formats -- PGP message and certificate formats – OpenPGP/MIME -- MIME security encoding of multipart messages

14 Who’s watching your network OpenPGP OpenPGP formats – Replaces informational RFC1991 – In IETF last call for Proposed Standard OpenPGP/MIME – Finishing up replacement for RFC2015

15 Who’s watching your network

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