From: "Pars Mutaf" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   I won't publish my SIP URI in a phone book allowing anyone to see it.
   We already agreed on that.

   I'll tell it to people that I know only. I'll tell it using a user friendly
   mechanism called "pairing" : We meet each other with our cell phones,
   and agree to exchange our contact information. So, the procedure is
   under our control. Pairing is good for us also because it allows us to
   exchange a secret key (note that this is already enough motivation for
   the pairing idea).

So your usage model is that you will only want to communicate with
people that you already know, and in most cases, have personally met.
This means that you have no need of a directory, as your SIP device
will be used to remember the URI of every person that you can call.

Note that this is much like how many mobile phone users use their
mobiles, but the opposite of the normal model of landline telephones,
where it is expected that the public can discover and contact you.

   My question was: do we need the SIP trapezoid in this case.

If you assume that each mobile has a fixed IPv6 address, then the
address-based URI will always reach the mobile.  And in that case, you
don't need a home proxy that translates an AOR into a contact URI --
in effect, that translation process has been moved down into the
network layer by the process of routing to that IPv6 address.

But it seems unlikely that an individual will have a fixed IPv6
address over the long term.  For one, it seems unlikely that *every*
network will provide uniform IPv6 mobility.  For another, what if the
user replaces his mobile?

Dale


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