Two additional thoughts inline, <ALEX>

From: Ideas [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Padma Pillay-Esnault
Sent: Wednesday, October 11, 2017 10:33 AM
To: Christian Huitema <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected] list <[email protected]>; Dino Farinacci 
<[email protected]>; Robert Moskowitz <[email protected]>; Brian E 
Carpenter <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Ideas] [lisp] WG Review: IDentity Enabled Networks (ideas)



On Wed, Oct 11, 2017 at 9:15 AM, Christian Huitema 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On 10/11/2017 7:56 AM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
and 'identity' is a red flag.

Whow there!  You were part of the Namespace Research Group?  I think?  I was 
and we we worked a lot on this and came to the conclusion that there could be 
no conclusion.  Not even a rough concensus, it seemed.

I have been using 'identity' to apply to things for 20 years. Pretty much ever 
since I started working with things.  Anyone that holds the position that 
'identity' means we are talking only about people are allowing their thinking 
to be clouded.

I am concerned that the current proponents of the IDEAS work are mainly 
resisting the feedback, treating it as some roadblock put in the path of their 
work by misguided privacy purists, and attempting to remove the roadblocks by 
adding some weasel words to the charter. I would feel much more confident if 
these proponents acknowledged the tension between privacy and stable 
identifiers of any sort, if that tension was clearly noted in the charter, and 
if privacy goals were clearly stated.

As one of the proponents, I feel I need to speak up because blanket statements 
are just not helping.

Speaking on behalf of my fellow proponents, we have always welcomed 
constructive feedback from people who want/can contribute and make the 
technology better. We have been willing to clarify the charter (clarification 
does not mean weaseling).

If it is helpful to  move forward, I am willing to volunteer for this work and 
discuss with anyone to ensure constructive feedback and comments are addressed.

<ALEX> +1 on welcoming constructive feedback.  To incorporate it we need to 
update documents.  An update to the ccm use case document was posted yesterday 
(rev -02) which incorporates a lot of the feedback given.  Clearly, this will 
not be the last update and other documents need to follow.
</ALEX>


Specifically, I think there is a contradiction between some of documents. For 
example, draft-padma-ideas-problem-statement-01 states that:

   o  A single entity may have multiple IDs, and IDs of the same entity

      may have different life spans that are different from the lifespan

      of the entity.  Furthermore, it is understood that IDs may have

      different lifecycles, which may be permanent or ephemeral by

      choice or design.



   o  Ephemeral (temporary) IDs may be used as a short-lived pseudonym

      for a permanent ID to protect the privacy of the related entity.
But then, draft-ccm-ideas-identity-use-cases-01 states that:

   a.  Unique and Permanent Identity representing the entity enables

       authentication (AUTH) with the mapping and Identity services

       infrastructure.  While it is possible to do AUTH on Identifiers

       those are not permanently associated to the entity.  Moreover,

       AUTH operation is a relatively an expensive and inefficient

       procedure (compared to LOC resolution for example) and can cause

       excessive startup delays for lot of applications.



As said earlier this draft was not updated by the authors and a new version was 
posted yesterday.

https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ideas/current/msg00520.html

<ALEX> I think you meant to say it *was* updated ;-)
draft-padma-ideas-problem-statement will presumably be one of the documents 
that are next in line for updating.  </ALEX>

The tension is obvious. On one hand, the ephemeral identifiers envisaged in the 
problem statement would pretty much align the privacy properties of the ID to 
those of IPv6 privacy addresses, and that's good. On the other hand, the 
requirement to perform authentication on identities completely negates that 
property.

I would be fine if the support for "Unique and Permanent Identity" was 
explicitly excluded from the charter.

AFAIK, none of the proponents resisted that.

There is obviously a need to support some form of access control to a mapping 
database,

Agreed.

but you do not need a reference to a permanent identity for that -- systems 
similar to CGA would work just fine.


The identity of the device is just adding a lever of identifier which 
effectively allows authentication to modify the identifiers used by that device 
but also what the users of these identifiers can look up. If we had used "user 
of identifier" it would have been misconstrued for humans. So damn if you do 
and damn if you don't ...

We are open for discussions anytime.

Padma






--

Christian Huitema

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