> you can keep using TLS1.2 in your internal network, can't you? There are both public and private sector regulators arcing towards being more prescriptive in this area. It is possible, if not likely, in the not too distant future that my member companies will not have the choice to "downgrade" to "obsolete" TLS versions.
Note: the standards track document says it "Obsoletes: RFC 5246" which is TLS 1.2. That's a signal that may prove difficult to divert in this rapidly evolving threat and regulatory environment. - Andrew From: Xiaoyin Liu [mailto:xiaoyi...@outlook.com] Sent: Friday, September 23, 2016 5:00 PM To: BITS Security <bitssecur...@fsroundtable.org>; Salz, Rich <rs...@akamai.com>; nalini.elk...@insidethestack.com Cc: tls@ietf.org Subject: Re: [TLS] Industry Concerns about TLS 1.3 Andrew, I don't understand why your "choice is being removed", because you can keep using TLS1.2 in your internal network, can't you? Best, Xiaoyin From: BITS Security Sent: Friday, September 23, 2016 4:31 PM To: Salz, Rich; nalini.elk...@insidethestack.com Cc: tls@ietf.org Subject: Re: [TLS] Industry Concerns about TLS 1.3 Rich (et al.) -- I understand where you are coming from but I will poke a little bit at this portrayal. We are not here hat-in-hand asking for a return to RSA key exchange to the proposed standard. We do however want to raise our concern (and hopefully your awareness) of what appears to be an unintended consequence of the move to PFS-only choices. What is happening from our perspective is choice is being removed and an adequate replacement has (seemingly) not been identified. This lack of choice may not affect everyone and every use-case but it will predictably affect large, complex, highly regulated enterprises in a serious manner. This is a classic case of security requirement being in conflict with a different security requirement. IETF protocols are run extensively both on the public Internet and within private enterprises. Any decisions made by the TLS Working Group will affect both environments, and the needs and requirements of both environments should be considered. -Andrew -----Original Message----- From: TLS [mailto:tls-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Salz, Rich Sent: Friday, September 23, 2016 3:08 PM To: nalini.elk...@insidethestack.com Cc: tls@ietf.org Subject: Re: [TLS] Industry Concerns about TLS 1.3 > It would be very interesting to get the network diagnostic and operations > people (rather than the architects) of the above companies involved in this > conversation. Nothing has ever stopped them. Never. Participation is as simple as joining a mailing list. The IETF has been doing SSL and TLS for nearly 20 years. It is not a secret. It was incumbent on them to reach out and get involved. > Why don't we listen to each other? I know at IETF, I often hear that we > don't get enough operators to comment and give feedback. Well, here you have > some. It may be that these companies have problems that are different from > Google's (just as an example). Don't try to equate "listen to each other" with "meet my requirement." The message has been stated, very clearly, from individuals, WG members, through document editors and WG chairs and up to Security Directors: static RSA is not coming back to TLS 1.3 . Since before the last IETF this was the message, consistently. So perhaps you should answer the question first -- why aren't *you* listening? :) PFS is also possible in TLS 1.1 and later. What does, say USBank, do to prevent PFS in their existing deployment? Why won't additional controls to prevent TLS 1.3 and its mandatory PFS be expected to work here as well? So far all I've seen is "maybe there's bugs in TLS 1.2 and we'll be forced to move to TLS 1.3" Shrug. There are bugs everywhere. Maybe there's bugs in TLS 1.3 too. Look, pretty much the entire world is being spied on by national-scale adversaries who are recording all traffic for eventual decryption and correlation. *Almost everyone* is having their traffic surveilled. The problems of debugging a set of enterprise apps doesn't amount to a hill of beans in that world. It just doesn't. Same for a particular industry's regulatory requirements. > Isn't our goal to have the best standards possible? Any organism (including > the IETF), needs feedback to thrive. Oxygen, coke, and cookies too. -- Senior Architect, Akamai Technologies IM: richs...@jabber.at Twitter: RichSalz _______________________________________________ TLS mailing list TLS@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/tls _______________________________________________ TLS mailing list TLS@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/tls _______________________________________________ TLS mailing list TLS@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/tls