Ok. I think it's coming together for me, including my other comments on PEP 
bootstrapping. To test my understanding, the Roles from the PDP could be 
thought of as "policy collections" and the Policies as a pointer to all the 
resource attributes that the PDP needs to make its access decision. Is that a 
correct (re)characterization?

I definitely agree with Trevor about limiting the inputs that a user needs to 
make, particularly for email, which most users take a ready-fire-aim approach 
to. So the question that comes to mind is whether there are other uses of those 
attributes outside of plasma that may be helpful in having available directly 
in the message? Document retention/destruction and search are two that come to 
mind.

Another conderation is the number of individual policies that this approach 
results in, particularly for organizations that have thousands of active 
licenses and agreements. 

This is really an architecture allocation question: what component(s) are 
responsible for managing and resolving the individual resource attributes. It 
needs to be done somewhere, and plasma is recommending the PDP. I'm content to 
have a better understanding (I hope) of the plasma approach for the moment. I 
know Trevor has thought this through a lot and will be quite happy to share his 
views when he get back. Please do correct me if my understanding is still off 
or if you disagree with the considerations above though. 

Scott
------
Sent from my BlackBerry

----- Original Message -----
From: Jim Schaad [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, August 06, 2011 05:27 PM
To: Fitch, Scott C; [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: EXTERNAL: RE: [plasma] Advanced Policies

Having separate threads is frequently simpler so I have no objections to
that.

I really wish Trevor was not on vacation so he could respond.  Instead I
will attempt to channel him and try not to get things really wrong.

Based on previous conversations that I have had with Trevor (including last
week at the Plasma side bar), the assumption we are working on is that users
are not the brightest of people and things should be made as simple as
possible for them.   One of the corollaries of this is that options should
generally not be given to users for configuration purposes.  This means that
there is no expectation that a generic ITAR policy would ever exist for a
company.   Instead you would define a different policy for each of the ITAR
export licenses/ projects.

Thus if you work on aircraft as an engineer, you would choose a role for a
specific plane and get a small list of policies.  It might be that the
end-user would not even see that it was ITAR export controlled, but rather
just that it is internal, external for that specific project.

The more options that make the end user select, the more likely that are to
get things wrong has been a basic philosophy that Trevor has espoused during
the design.   Counter arguments would be interesting, but probably better
after he gets back at the end of the month.

Jim


> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Fitch, Scott C
> Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2011 2:05 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [plasma] Advanced Policies
> 
> (Apologies for all the posts. Just trying to keep the threads separate for
> commenting.)
> 
> It's important to acknowledge that many Advanced policies will required
> information about the message beyond just the Policy identifier. An
example
> from the export control world: An email may be governed by the ITAR
policy,
> however, access control decisions are made based ITAR and the specific
> export license or agreement that applies to the message. Simply
identifying
> that the document is export controlled doesn't given the PDP enough
> information to make a grant or deny decision.
> 
> Stated differently, an access decision is based on attributes about the
> requester, resource, environment, and action. The plasma scenarios for
> Advanced Policies should include the ability to convey attributes (labels)
> about the message (including, but not limited to the policy identifier)
and
> attributes about the recipient.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Scott Fitch
> Cyber Architect
> Lockheed Martin Enterprise Business Services
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> plasma mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/plasma


_______________________________________________
plasma mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/plasma

Reply via email to