> Instead the trend is to support a small set of algorithms that are
generally considered "okay-ish" (there are always minor ups and downs
of certain cipher choices
I think it is an English language issue, but I would phrase this as "generally
considered good" Much better than "okay-ish."
If anyone wants to specify new ciphers, they need to write an internet-draft,
or some other published standard, and submit a request to the TLS registry. It
does *not* have to be an RFC. There are often not-strictly-technical reasons
for needing this.
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