Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Industry Canada 1 Bob Leafloor Colman Ho Peter Chau Industry Canada January 2003 (ENUM) T E lephone NU mber M apping.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Industry Canada 1 Bob Leafloor Colman Ho Peter Chau Industry Canada January 2003 (ENUM) T E lephone NU mber M apping."— Presentation transcript:

1 Industry Canada 1 Bob Leafloor Colman Ho Peter Chau Industry Canada January 2003 (ENUM) T E lephone NU mber M apping

2 Industry Canada 2 Disclaimer The views, thoughts and information contained in this presentation are solely intended assist in opening a dialogue on how best to proceed with ENUM in Canada These views, thoughts and information do not necessarily represent views, policies, opinions or understandings of Industry Canada

3 Industry Canada 3 What is ENUM? ENUM is a protocol developed by the IETF (RFC 2916) that enables: End-user Subscriber Services subscriber defined preferences for incoming communications Network to Network Services network elements to find services on other network elements using only a telephone number Enhanced SPAM Services ENUM could become the worlds largest database of active, legitimate email addresses –SPAM gold mine?

4 Industry Canada 4 An end-user service that specifies alternative contacting methods for that end-user An important integrator of the PSTN, the Internet and other IP based networks Facilitates terminating calls from other networks to IP based networks. Why ENUM?

5 Industry Canada 5 1.Transform the telephone number into an ENUM DNS name 2.Query the DNS to resolve that name and retrieve information (NAPTR RRs) that have been associated with the telephone number 3.Choose a service from the DNS NAPTR response on the various types of services (including order & preference) associated with the telephone number ENUM 3 Step Process

6 Industry Canada 6 The result of an ENUM DNS query is the NAPTR records, which specify the alternative methods of contact with their order of processing and preference ENUM Database Choose a service from the DNS response The ultimate choice of contact rests with the sender Query Choose NAPTR Choice

7 Industry Canada 7 ENUM is specified in IETF RFC 2916 RFC 2916 specifies a unique one-to-one bi- directional mapping algorithm between E.164 telephone numbers and DNS names RFC 2916 specifies e164.arpa to be the ENUM DNS Name Space Root Therefore NAPTR information rooted outside e164.arpa is not ENUM Points of Consideration

8 Industry Canada 8 The ITU-T as part of it’s E.164 responsibility is cooperating with the IETF on ENUM Some ITU Member States oppose the use of e164.arpa as the ENUM root A final decision has yet to be made on the root within ITU E164.arpa is being used for the ENUM trials, in accordance with the ITU interim procedures Points of Consideration

9 Industry Canada 9 Draft procedures at the ITU require that ITU Member States (countries) opt-in to ENUM before any DNS names corresponding to the E.164 telephone numbers under that countries jurisdiction can be added to the ENUM domain space Canada has yet to reach a decision as to whether or not to opt-in Points of Consideration

10 Industry Canada 10 Industry Canada is the Canadian ITU Administration and hence the opt-in/opt-out authority from an ITU perspective The US has essentially decided to opt-in Since CC 1 is a shared country code, a US opt-in has implications for Canada and for other CC 1 members Points of Consideration

11 Industry Canada 11 The ITU draft procedures will remain draft until the e164.arpa issue is resolved The application of ‘ENUM’ technology to networking problems, or to enable new network features can be dealt with through existing processes ENUM Services could potentially facilitate SPAM, so far this has not been discussed Points of Consideration

12 Industry Canada 12 Points of Consideration The ENUM domain name space will be organized in tiers, likely three tiers 0, 1, and 2 Tier-0, the ENUM domain name space root, would be administered by the ITU-T/Ripe NCC Countries would opt-in or opt-out at the Tier-0 level The Tier-0 name server would have ‘NS’ (Name Server) records for the Tier-1 name server(s) of the opted-in countries

13 Industry Canada 13 Points of Consideration The organization below Tier-0 for countries opting-in would be their responsibility This would include: Administration Operation Competition Privacy/Security, etc.

14 Industry Canada 14 Points of Consideration Industry has, at least, business interests in ENUM? Industry Canada interests include Telecom policy, privacy, security, etc., etc. CRTC interests include Telecom regulation, numbering, etc., etc. CIRA is responsible for the DNS name space under ‘.ca’, including the dispute resolution process for that domain name space

15 Industry Canada 15 Points of Consideration ENUM Hijacking occurs when the assignee of a complete ENUM domain name is not the assignee of the corresponding E.164 telephone number Administration of E.164 telephone numbers and ENUM domain names are likely to be done separately Should CIRA be responsible for the DNS name space under e164.arpa corresponding to Canadian E.164 telephone numbers?

16 Industry Canada 16 Points of Consideration Country Code 1 (CC 1) being integrated is a special case If the ‘NS’ delegation from Tier-0 for CC 1 is at the ‘1’ level then it needs to point to a single Tier-1 name server for all of CC 1 If the ‘NS’ delegation from Tier-0 for CC 1 is at the ‘1+NPA’ level then it can potentially point to a separate Tier-1 name server for each NPA of CC 1, as per the following example

17 Industry Canada 17 Directs the DNS query to the countries Tier-1 registries An NS record is provided for each Tier-1 1+NPA registry Stores a list of service specific internet addresses in the form of URI’s in a DNS resource record called NAPTR for each subscriber Returns the full list of Internet addresses associated with the E.164 number being queried Directs the DNS query to the customer’s Tier-2 providers An NS record is provided for each subscriber’s telephone number Tier-2 9. 7. 3. 1. 6. 4. 9. 3.1. 6. 1. e164. arpa Tier-1 Tier-0 Tiered Structure – An Example National ITU/Ripe NCC Registry Registry Provider

18 Industry Canada 18 The US ENUM Forum (www.enum-forum.org) is a US industry lead group developing a proposed US implementation strategy for ENUM The Forum has developed document 6000_1_0 a comprehensive proposed set of implementation specifications The Forum is currently working on proposals for the Tier 1 Contracting Entity and on Architectural Alternatives US Forum Perspective

19 Industry Canada 19 For Tier 1 Contracting they are considering: Government Procurement Industry Limited Liability Company For Architectural Alternatives they are considering the five following alternatives: US Forum Perspective

20 Industry Canada 20 Five Possible Solutions: Single Tier 1 for all NANP countries Single Tier 1 in US With delegation from Tier 0 by 1+NPA With delegation from Skinny Tier 1 Multiple Tier 1 operators in US With delegation from Tier 0 by 1+NPA With delegation from Skinny Tier 1 US Forum Perspective - Architecture Proposal

21 Industry Canada 21 Single Tier 1 for NANP Countries Assumes: All of country code 1 is delegated to a single Tier 1 All participating NANP countries can/will form a single contracting entity Tier 0 Tier 1 Tier 2 US Forum Perspective

22 Industry Canada 22 Single Tier 1 for US Requires either delegation from Tier 0 by NPA or Skinny Tier 1 Tier 0 US Tier 1 Tier 2 Delegation by NPA Tier 0 US Tier 1 Tier 2 Delegation of country code 1 Skinny Tier 1 Delegation by NPA US Forum Perspective

23 Industry Canada 23 Multiple Tier 1 Operators in the US Assumes: US NPA’s are delegated to multiple tier 1 entities from Tier 0; or All of country code 1 is delegated to a single skinny Tier 1 US Forum Perspective Tier 0 US Tier 1s Tier 2 Delegation by NPA Tier 0 Delegation of country code 1 Skinny Tier 1 US Tier 1s Tier 2 Delegation by NPA

24 Industry Canada 24 No consensus on architectural alternatives Any solution which involves the delegation of country code 1 from Tier 0 will require agreement from all 19 NANP countries Delegation of US NPAs from Tier 0 may require negotiation with Tier 0 How many registries should operate for those NPAs in the US? US Forum Perspective - Summary

25 Industry Canada 25 Industry Canada has been following ENUM for some time now A working group was established under TSACC, a presentation was made to CSCN, etc. The US picture was initially unclear and Industry Canada, TSACC and industry were essentially at a wait and see But that was then and this is now….. Canadian Perspective

26 Industry Canada 26 Proposed ENUM service offerings in Canada should originate from industry! When the US goes forward on ENUM, we need to recognize that: Their selected architectural alternative will have implications for Canada as we share the same Country Code If the US service is a success, Canadian subscribers may ask why there is no Canadian service CanadianPerspective Canadian Perspective

27 Industry Canada 27 Canadian ENUM interested parties include: Industry Industry Canada TSACC CRTC CRTC/CISC Working Groups Committee on Numbering (CSCN) Network Working Group CIRA Customers CanadianPerspective Canadian Perspective

28 Industry Canada 28 Some items for our consideration include: The Tier-1/2 structure, administration, and operation Location requirements (if any) for Tier-1/2 operators Interfacing with other members of CC 1 on implementation How 1+800 etc., for Country Code 1 should be handled How to keep ENUM transparent to NANP/NANPA and vise versa DNS security requirements for ENUM Privacy, Confidentiality, Integrity, Availability, and Identification and Authentication requirements for ENUM What threats and vulnerabilities may ENUM be subject to CanadianPerspective Canadian Perspective

29 Industry Canada 29 Bob Leafloor Colman Ho Peter Chau Industry Canada January 2003 (ENUM) T E lephone NU mber M apping Thank you


Download ppt "Industry Canada 1 Bob Leafloor Colman Ho Peter Chau Industry Canada January 2003 (ENUM) T E lephone NU mber M apping."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google