Hi Paul - thanks for this; two comments inline.

I'm an Outlook Webmail n00b, so just in case "nesting" doesn't work, I have 
marked them with @@@.


________________________________
From: Paul Turner <paul.tur...@venafi.com>
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2017 12:03 PM
To: Robin Wilton; tls@ietf.org
Subject: RE: [TLS] Is there a way forward after today's hum?



From: TLS [mailto:tls-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Robin Wilton
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2017 05:58
To: tls@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [TLS] Is there a way forward after today's hum?


Apologies for not replying "in thread" on this occasion, for noob reasons... 
but here's the specific comment from Russ that I wanted to respond to:



________________________________

The hum told us that the room was roughly evenly split.  In hind sight, I wish 
the chairs had asked a second question.  If the split in the room was different 
for the second question, then I think we might have learned a bit more about 
what people are thinking.



If a specification were available that used an extension that involved both the 
client and the server, would the working group adopt it, work on it, and 
publish it as an RFC?



I was listening very carefully to the comments made by people in line.  Clearly 
some people would hum for "no" to the above question, but it sounded like many 
felt that this would be a significant difference.  It would ensure that both 
server and client explicitly opt-in, and any party observing the handshake 
could see the extension was included or not.



Russ

====



Stephen Farrell articulated a concern with that approach - namely, that if we 
are relying on a setting that is meant to ensure both parties must be aware 
that static DH is in use, then a bad actor would find ways to suppress that 
notification. In your proposal, Russ, the notification mechanism would take the 
form of an extension... so I think we would need to understand what the 
failsafe is, for instance if that extension is disabled, or not present, in a 
given deployment of TLS.



There's an implicit assumption about the threat model, too, which I just want 
to call out. The assumption is that a bad actor would suppress the notification 
so that the client is not aware that static DH is in use. For completeness, 
should we also consider whether there are attacks in which it's the *server* 
whose notification is suppressed? (I can't think of such an attack, off the top 
of my head, but then, that's probably why I'm not a hacker. ;^, )



Best wishes,

Robin



Robin,



With respect to your threat concerns, can you be more clear about the threats 
you’re considering? Here are a few things that come to mind:



  1.  TLS Server has all of the decrypted data and can provide that to a third 
party (whether compelled or otherwise) without any indication to the TLS 
client. This seems true TLS 1.3 today.
  2.  TLS Server has their ephemeral DH keys and session keys and can provide 
them to a third party without any indication to the TLS client. This seems true 
with TLS 1.3 today.
  3.  TLS Server can create a TLS server implementation that uses static DH 
keys and provide them to a third party. The client can use methods to detect 
this (though there are measures and countermeasures here). This is true seems 
TLS 1.3 today.
  4.  TLS Client has all of the decrypted data and can provide that to a third 
party (whether compelled or otherwise) without any indication to the TLS 
server. This seems true in TLS 1.3 today.
  5.  TLS Client has their ephemeral DH keys and session keys and can provide 
them to a third party without any indication to the TLS server. This seems true 
with TLS 1.3 today.

@@@I'll have to give these proper thought when I have more bandwidth - so, I'm 
not ignoring these good questions/scenarios!




I believe Russ was outlining a method where an extension would be added to TLS 
1.3 that would provide for delivery of a decryption key to a third party during 
the handshake (correct me if I got that wrong, Russ).


@@@This seems somewhat different to static DH... are we now talking about an 
alternative, more along key escrow lines?  Apologies if I missed something 
earlier from Russ; I'll go back down the thread and see.


Because it would be during the handshake, it would seem to be visible to the 
TLS  Client—in fact, the client would have to include the extension to begin 
with. If the TLS client saw the extension and did not consent, it could abort 
the connection. If the TLS Server were attempting to provide access to the 
exchanged data to a third party, it would seem they could use 1, 2, or 3 above 
and not have to go to the trouble of attempting to subvert the mechanism that 
Russ proposes (and others have previously proposed).



Can you clarify?



Paul
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