On Wed, 26 Jun 2019, Rashmi Jha wrote:

[speaking as an individual only]

Name constraints itself if orthogonal to CT but both of these achieve the same 
goal.  Restrict a CA to issue certs for the domains they are suppose to. The 
difference is following :

 *  In CT, you log the cert into CT logs at the time of issuance of each cert  
 *  Name constrained is upfront where CA declares that I am going to issue 
certs only for ford.com, jaguar.com (hypothetically) and that’s it.  

Sure, but having a CA per TLD or even per group of SLD's would explode
the number of CAs required. And if these all need to comply to the
CAB/Forum rules, that's a lot of auditing.

Named constraints CA shouldn’t need to log each time when a cert is issued.  
Because the verification and monitor of whether the CA has complied with the 
goal is done offline or a different time in both the
scenarios.

How would you detect a mis-issuance within the named constraint without CT?

The draft doesn’t address what should be an alternative for folks who don’t 
want CT

It could mention DNSSEC and DANE (TLSA), but I don't think it is
neccessary in this document.

 *  CT adds burden for each certificate issuance. It adds ~7seconds to every 
cert issuance and it adds a new failure endpoint in the path.

I don't think it adds latency if you regularly fetch the latest tree head?

 *  CT has 0 alternatives.


DNSSEC with DANE/TLSA is an alternative.

There is no mechanism for redaction.

[chair hat on ]

Redaction has been brought up a number of times, but has not seen enough
work done for it to be added in this document. Later on, it was suggested
redaction should be done as a separate document.

[/chair hat]

CT drives an important industry-wide goal. There are other ways to achieve the 
same goal. And for organizations where each millisecond matters, the user agent 
should support an alternative rather than add
load and failure point at their critical path of issuance.  Named constraints 
is within the books of PKI.  A CA can be held accountable like any other 
CA/Browser baseline requirements that if they issue
certs outside of their constraints then they should take immediate action or 
get distrusted. It won’t be any different from a CA doing a wrong thing and got 
caught via CT monitors.

The draft only talks about the protocol. Whether or not to allow or
require it, in the presence or absence of CT, is up the the browser
vendors. So my question to you would be, if name constraints are to
be considered for this draft, would it require a document change?

This draft should prescribe an alternative to achieve the same goal which is 
achieved by CT and the details on that alternative can be covered somewhere 
else.

I'm confused that you say there are no alternatives and that
alternatives should be mentioned in the document?

Paul

From: Eran Messeri <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 20, 2019 3:10 AM
To: Paul Wouters <[email protected]>
Cc: Rashmi Jha <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Trans] draft-ietf-trans-rfc6962-bis-31

 

Paul made the point quite accurately - CT is orthogonal to name-constraining a 
CA, and can be used to validate the CA has adhered to the constrained names.

 

Additionally, there's no way to signal to a user agent that  such a CA would be 
"exempt" from CT (some user agents have Enterprise controls to allow instances 
managed by the organization to not require CT
for certain domains, though).

 

On Thu, Jun 20, 2019 at 12:44 AM Paul Wouters <[email protected]> wrote:

      On Wed, 19 Jun 2019, Rashmi Jha wrote:

      > Have you looked into the options of not requiring CT for CAs which are 
constrained to a brief list of domains ? I understand this was considered in the 
past but couldn’t find details why this
      was not
      > accepted.

      Whether or not to require CT is not part of the document. This seems
      more like a question to browser vendors. The draft only states:


          In addition, if TLS clients will not accept unlogged certificates,
          then site owners will have a greater incentive to submit certificates
          to logs, possibly with the assistance of their CA, increasing the
          overall transparency of the system.

      The "if" there is important. It is not a decision made in this document
      or this Working Group.

      The draft only lists the requirements and formats for when CT is used.

      > Named constraint by default provide the assurance as to what domains 
they will issue. CT becomes an additional network call in in issuance of 
certificate which can be prevented.  

      Not "assurance", but "expectation". CT is there to confirm this
      expectation. Surely, you want CT logs to show captured certificates that
      were signed by a CA outside of that CA's own Named constraint policy?

      Additionally, if you skip accepting certificates within a named
      constraint, what do you do when some CA claims ".com" as their
      named constraint?

      Paul

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