So if the "operational realities" of the operator include a mandate to 
intercept, like with a law like CALEA in the United States, then pervasive 
monitoring is OK?


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-------- Original message --------
From: Eliot Lear <[email protected]> 
Date:12/09/2013  7:29 AM  (GMT-05:00) 
To: "ietf-interest(mailer list)" <[email protected]>,perpass 
<[email protected]> 
Cc: Internet Architecture Board <[email protected]>,'IESG' <[email protected]> 
Subject: [perpass] comments and questions for the group on
        draft-farrell-perpass-attack-02 

These comments follow a thread from the IAB/IESG mailing list.

There has been some confusion over how this proposed BCP should be taken
by working groups.  At least one working group chair has inferred, if
not suggested, that a document before the IESG that does not demonstrate
it has mitigated pervasive surveillance will get returned.  That
wouldn't be appropriate, in my opinion.  A working group must consider
the operational realities that it is attempting to code to.  There are
many tensions to consider, not just a narrow view of network management
(a phrase that might itself be left to ambiguous interpretation).  I
have in mind as an example a service provider that does
transparent/intercepting HTTP caching for purposes of bandwidth
preservation in bandwidth-constrained environments.  Another example
would be an environment in which security and governance are key.

As such, I propose the following two changes to clarify the text in
Section 2:

2nd para:

OLD:
>    This BCP simply records the consensus to design
>    protocols so as to mitigate the attack, where possible.

NEW:

>    This BCP simply records the consensus to design
>    protocols so as to mitigate the attack, taking into account
> operational realities of network operators.

Next para:

OLD:
>    More limited-scope monitoring to assist with network management that
>    is required in order to operate the network or an application is not
>    considered pervasive monitoring.  There is though a clear potential
>    for such limited monitoring mechanisms to be abused as part of
>    pervasive monitoring, so this tension needs careful consideration in
>    protocol design.  Making networks unmanageable in order to mitigate
>    pervasive monitoring would not be an acceptable outcome.  But
>    equally, ignoring pervasive monitoring in designing network
>    management mechanisms would go against the consensus documented in
>    this BCP.  An appropriate balance will likely emerge over time as
>    real instances of this tension are considered.

NEW:

>    More limited-scope monitoring or other services or to assist with
> network operations that
>    is required in order to operate the network or an application is not
>    considered pervasive monitoring,
>    There is though a clear potential
>    for such mechanisms to be abused as part of
>    pervasive monitoring, so this tension needs careful consideration in
>    protocol design.  Making networks unmanageable in order to mitigate
>    pervasive monitoring would not be an acceptable outcome.  But
>    equally, ignoring pervasive monitoring in designing network
>    management mechanisms would go against the consensus documented in
>    this BCP.  An appropriate balance will likely emerge over time as
>    real instances of this tension are considered.

And so someone operating a small ISP with a cache in Madagascar or the
SP trying to manage bandwidth on a train can also have their
considerations taken into account.  It's for a working group to decide
how far to accommodate them, of course.

Eliot

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