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INFORMATIONAL
Independent Submission                                       M. MunakataRequest for Comments: 5379                                   S. SchubertCategory: Informational                                          T. OhbaISSN: 2070-1721                                                      NTT                                                           February 2010Guidelines for Using the Privacy Mechanism for SIPAbstract   This is an informational document that provides guidelines for using   the privacy mechanism for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) that   is specified inRFC 3323 and subsequently extended in RFCs 3325 and   4244.  It is intended to clarify the handling of the target SIP   headers/parameters and the Session Description Protocol (SDP)   parameters for each of the privacy header values (priv-values).Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other   RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at   its discretion and makes no statement about its value for   implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by   the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5379.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Semantics of Existing priv-values ...............................44. Target for Each priv-value ......................................54.1. Target SIP Headers for Each priv-value .....................54.2. Target SDP Parameters for Each priv-value ..................6      4.3. Treatment of priv-value Not Supported by the           Privacy Service ............................................75. Recommended Treatment of User-Privacy-Sensitive Information .....75.1. Target SIP Headers .........................................75.1.1. Call-ID .............................................75.1.2. Call-Info ...........................................85.1.3. Contact .............................................85.1.4. From ................................................95.1.5. History-Info .......................................105.1.6. In-Reply-To ........................................105.1.7. Organization .......................................115.1.8. P-Asserted-Identity ................................115.1.9. Record-Route .......................................125.1.10. Referred-By .......................................135.1.11. Reply-To ..........................................145.1.12. Server ............................................145.1.13. Subject ...........................................155.1.14. User-Agent ........................................155.1.15. Via ...............................................155.1.16. Warning ...........................................165.2. Target SDP Parameters .....................................165.2.1. c/m Lines ..........................................165.2.2. o Line .............................................175.2.3. i/u/e/p Lines ......................................175.3. Considerations for Non-Target SIP Headers/Parameters ......175.3.1. Identity/Identity-Info .............................175.3.2. Path ...............................................185.3.3. Replaces Header/Parameter ..........................185.3.4. Route ..............................................215.3.5. Service-Route ......................................215.3.6. Target-Dialog ......................................216. Security Considerations ........................................217. Acknowledgements ...............................................228. References .....................................................228.1. Normative References ......................................228.2. Informative References ....................................22Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20101.  Introduction   This document clarifies the privacy mechanism for the Session   Initiation Protocol (SIP) [RFC3261] defined in [RFC3323], which was   later extended in [RFC3325] and [RFC4244].  This document describes   the practical manner of operations of the privacy mechanism as a   guideline and does not change the existing privacy mechanism.   InRFC 3323, the semantics of the basic set of priv-values (header,   session, user, none, and critical) is defined, but there are some   ambiguities in regards to the target information to be obscured per   priv-value, which are not explicitly specified.  An ambiguity such as   this could result in different interpretations of privacy handling   for each of the priv-values defined, both at an entity setting a   Privacy header and at an entity processing a Privacy header, which   could have an adverse impact on interoperability.   Additional priv-values "id" and "history" are defined in RFCs 3325   and 4244, respectively.   InRFC 4244, the priv-value "history" is defined in order to request   privacy for History-Info headers, and the target to be obscured for   "history" priv-value is specified as only the History-Info headers.   In addition, the RFC clearly describes that History-Info headers are   also the target when "header"- and "session"-level privacy are   requested.   On the other hand,RFC 3325 defines the P-Asserted-Identity header   and a priv-value "id", which is used to request privacy for only the   P-Asserted-Identity header, but it does not specify how other priv-   values may impact the privacy handling of the P-Asserted-Identity   header.  Because of this lack of specification, it has been observed   that some implementations are suffering from the inability to achieve   the intended privacy due to discrepancies in interpretations.   This document tries to clarify the SIP headers and SDP parameters to   be obscured for each of the priv-values to alleviate the potential   interoperability issues already seen due to a lack of explicit text.2.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   Note: This document is informational; therefore, it does not specify         any new normative behaviors of privacy mechanism.  All theRFC2119 language in this document is derived from the normative         text in the existing RFCs, such asRFC 3323.   priv-value:         Values registered with IANA to be used in the Privacy header.         Registered priv-values are "header", "session", "user", "none",         and "critical" defined in [RFC3323]; "id" defined in [RFC3325];         and "history" defined in [RFC4244].   privacy service:         A network entity that executes privacy functions before         forwarding messages to the next hop.  It is sometimes         abbreviated to PS in this document.   user-level privacy:         Privacy for user-inserted information that can be anonymized by         the user agent itself.3.  Semantics of Existing priv-values   This section provides the semantics of each priv-value defined in   RFCs 3323, 3325, and 4244.  The descriptions are taken from the IANA   registration.   Privacy Type  Description                             Reference   ------------- ----------------------------------      ----------   user          Request that privacy services           [RFC3323]                 provide a user-level privacy function   header        Request that privacy services modify    [RFC3323]                 headers that cannot be set arbitrarily                 by the user (Contact/Via).   session       Request that privacy services provide   [RFC3323]                 privacy for session media   none          Privacy services must not perform any   [RFC3323]                 privacy function   critical      Privacy service must perform the        [RFC3323]                 specified services or fail the request   id            Privacy requested for Third-Party       [RFC3325]                 Asserted IdentityMunakata                      Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   history       Privacy requested for                   [RFC4244]                 History-Info header(s)4.  Target for Each priv-value   Tables in this section show the recommended treatment of SIP headers   and SDP parameters per priv-value.  SIP headers and SDP parameters   not shown in the tables are regarded as non-targets of these priv-   values.  Some non-target SIP headers/SDP parameters may carry   privacy-sensitive information that may need privacy treatment   regardless of the privacy level requested.  This is further described   in 5.3.   The way in which SIP headers and SDP parameters listed here are   obscured may depend on the implementation and network policy.  This   document does not prevent different variations that may exist based   on local policy but tries to provide recommendations for how a   privacy service treats SIP headers and SDP parameters.   Note: The scope of these tables is SIP headers and related parameters         specified in RFCs.4.1.  Target SIP Headers for Each priv-value   Table 1 below shows a recommended treatment of each SIP header for   each priv-value.  Detailed descriptions of the recommended treatment   per SIP header are covered inSection 5.   The "where" column describes the request and response types in which   the header needs the treatment to maintain privacy.  Values in this   column are:      R: The header needs the treatment when it appears in a request.      r: The header needs the treatment when it appears in a response.   The next five columns show the recommended treatment for each priv-   value:      delete: The header is recommended to be deleted at a privacy         service.      not add: The header is recommended not to be added at a privacy         service.      anonymize: The header is recommended to be anonymized at a privacy         service.  How to anonymize the header depends on the header.         Details are given inSection 5.Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010      anonymize*: An asterisk indicates that the involvement of a         privacy service and treatment of the relevant header depend on         the circumstance.  Details are given inSection 5.   Target headers    where   user     header    session   id   history   --------------------------------------------------------------------   Call-ID (Note)      R   anonymize    -         -       -      -   Call-Info           Rr   delete    not add     -       -      -   Contact             R      -      anonymize    -       -      -   From                R   anonymize    -         -       -      -   History-Info        Rr     -       delete    delete    -    delete   In-Reply-To         R    delete      -         -       -      -   Organization        Rr   delete    not add     -       -      -   P-Asserted-Identity Rr     -       delete      -     delete   -   Record-Route        Rr     -      anonymize    -       -      -   Referred-By         R   anonymize*   -         -       -      -   Reply-To            Rr   delete      -         -       -      -   Server              r    delete    not add     -       -      -   Subject             R    delete      -         -       -      -   User-Agent          R    delete      -         -       -      -   Via                 R      -      anonymize    -       -      -   Warning             r   anonymize    -         -       -      -           Table 1: Recommended PS behavior for each SIP header   Note: Any time a privacy service modifies a Call-ID, it MUST retain         the former and modified values as indicated inSection 5.3 in         RFC 3323.  It MUST then restore the former value in a Call-ID         header and other corresponding headers and parameters (such as         In-Reply-To, Replaces, and Target-Dialog) in any messages that         are sent using the modified Call-ID to the originating user         agent.  It should also modify a Call-ID header and other         corresponding headers/parameters (such as Target-Dialog and         "replaces" parameter) in any further relevant messages that are         sent by the originating user agent.  Refer toSection 5.1.1         (Call-ID) for the detailed behavior.   Identity/Identity-Info, Path, Replaces, Route, Service-Route, and   Target-Dialog headers are not targets of these priv-values (and   should not be anonymized or modified by a privacy service based on a   priv-value in a Privacy header).  Refer toSection 5.3 for details.4.2.  Target SDP Parameters for Each priv-value   The recommended PS behaviors for each SDP parameters are simple.  The   c, m, o, i, u, e, and p lines in SIP request/response are recommended   to be anonymized when user privacy is requested with Privacy:session.Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20104.3.  Treatment of priv-value Not Supported by the Privacy Service   As specified inRFC 3323, if the priv-value of "critical" is present   in the Privacy header of a request, and if the privacy service is   incapable of performing all of the levels of privacy specified in the   Privacy header, it MUST fail the request with a 500 (Server Error)   response code as indicated inSection 5 in RFC 3323.   Since the protection of privacy is important, even if the priv-value   "critical" is not present in the Privacy header, the privacy service   should fail the request with a 500 response code when it is incapable   of performing all of the levels of privacy specified in the Privacy   header.5.  Recommended Treatment of User-Privacy-Sensitive Information   The following SIP headers and related parameters may concern privacy.   This section describes what kind of user-privacy-sensitive   information may be included in each SIP header/parameter, and how to   maintain privacy for such information at a user agent or a privacy   service when the information is indeed privacy-sensitive.5.1.  Target SIP Headers   This section describes privacy considerations and recommended   treatment for each SIP header that may reveal user-privacy-sensitive   information.  This section goes into details about how each header   affects privacy, the desired treatment of the value by the user agent   and privacy service, and other instructions/additional notes   necessary to provide privacy.5.1.1.  Call-ID   This field frequently contains an IP address or hostname of a UAC   (User Agent Client) appended to the Call-ID value.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   SHOULD substitute for the IP address or hostname that is frequently   appended to the Call-ID value a suitably long random value (the value   used as the 'tag' for the From header of the request might even be   reused) as indicated inSection 4.1 in RFC 3323.   A privacy service MAY anonymize the Call-ID header when the request   contains Privacy:user by substituting for the IP address or hostname   in the Call-ID a suitably long random value (such as a From tag   value) so that it is sufficiently unique as indicated inSection 5.3   in RFC 3323.Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   Call-ID is essential to dialog matching, so any time a privacy   service modifies this field, it MUST retain the former value and   restore it in a Call-ID header in any messages that are sent to/by   the originating user agent inside the dialog as indicated inSection5.3 in RFC 3323.  A privacy service should be prepared to receive a   request outside the dialog containing the value of the Call-ID set by   the PS in other SIP headers (e.g., In-Reply-To/Replaces/   Target-Dialog), at least while the dialog state is active for the   dialog whose Call-ID was modified by that PS.  When such a request is   received, the Call-ID value contained in the relevant headers   indicated above should be replaced by the retained value.   Note: This is possible only if the privacy service maintains the         state and retains all the information it modified to provide         privacy.  Some PSs are known to encrypt information prior to         obfuscation in the Via header, etc.  In this case, the PS         cannot correlate the modified Call-ID value with the original         Call-ID.  Further challenges are imposed when the PS needs to         stay on a signaling path to ensure that it receives all the         messages targeted towards the caller for which a PS provides         privacy, especially when the request is out-of-dialog.   Refer to the corresponding sections, 5.1.6 (In-Reply-To), 5.3.3   (Replaces Header/Parameter), and 5.3.6 (Target-Dialog), for detailed   discussion.5.1.2.  Call-Info   This field contains additional information about the user.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   SHOULD NOT add a Call-Info header as indicated in Section 4.1 inRFC3323.   A privacy service MUST delete a Call-Info header if one exists when   user privacy is requested with Privacy:user as indicated inSection5.3 in RFC 3323.  A privacy service SHOULD NOT add a Call-Info header   when user privacy is requested with Privacy:header as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.5.1.3.  Contact   This field contains a URI used to reach the user agent for mid-dialog   requests and possibly out-of-dialog requests, such as REFER   [RFC3315].  Since the Contact header is essential for routing further   requests to the user agent, it must include a functional URI even   when it is anonymized.Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   A user agent MUST NOT anonymize a Contact header, unless it can   obtain an IP address or contact address that is functional yet has a   characteristic of anonymity as indicated in Section 4.1.1.3 inRFC3323.   SinceRFC 3323 was published, there have been proposals that allow   UAs to obtain an IP address or contact address with a characteristic   of anonymity.   The mechanisms that are discussed at the time of this writing are   Globally Routable User Agent URIs (GRUU) [SIPGRUU], which provides a   functional Contact address with a short life span, making it ideal   for privacy sensitive calls, and Traversal Using Relays around NAT   (TURN) [TURN], through which an IP address of a relay can be obtained   for use in a Contact header.   A privacy service SHOULD anonymize a Contact header by replacing the   existing Contact header field value with the URI that dereferences to   the privacy service when user privacy is requested with   Privacy:header, as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.  This is   generally done by replacing the IP address or hostname with that of   the privacy service.5.1.4.  From   This field contains the identity of the user, such as display-name   and URI.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   SHOULD anonymize a From header using an anonymous display-name and an   anonymous URI as indicated inSection 4.1 in RFC 3323.   A privacy service should anonymize a From header when user privacy is   requested with Privacy:user.   Note: This does not prevent a privacy service from anonymizing the         From header based on local policy.   The anonymous display-name and anonymous URI mentioned in this   section use display-name "Anonymous", a URI with "anonymous" in the   user portion of the From header, and the hostname value   "anonymous.invalid" as indicated inSection 4.1.1.3 in RFC 3323.   The recommended form of the From header for anonymity is:   From: "Anonymous" <sip:anonymous@anonymous.invalid>;tag=1928301774Munakata                      Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   The tag value varies from dialog to dialog, but the rest of this   header form is recommended as shown.5.1.5.  History-Info   History-Info [RFC4244] header URIs to which the request was forwarded   or retargeted can reveal general routing information.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   SHOULD NOT add a History-Info header as indicated inSection 3.3 in   RFC 4244.   A privacy service SHOULD delete the History-Info headers when user   privacy is requested with Privacy:header, Privacy:session, or   Privacy:history as indicated inSection 3.3 in RFC 4244.   The privacy could be also expressed for a specific History-Info entry   by inserting "privacy=history" in the History-Info header.  In such a   case, a privacy service SHOULD delete the History-Info entry as   indicated inSection 4.3.3.1.1 in RFC 4244.   Refer to [RFC4244] for detailed behavior for dealing with History-   Info headers.5.1.6.  In-Reply-To   The In-Reply-To header contains a Call-ID of the referenced dialog.   The replying user may be identified by the Call-ID in an In-Reply-To   header.   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1) > Bob   Bob   > INV(In-Reply-To:C1) > Alice   In this case, unless the In-Reply-To header is deleted, Alice might   notice that the replying user is Bob because Alice's UA knows that   the Call-ID relates to Bob.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not add an In-Reply-To header as implied in Section 4.1 inRFC3323.   A privacy service MUST delete the In-Reply-To header when user   privacy is requested with Privacy:user as indicated inSection 5.3 in   RFC 3323.   In addition, since an In-Reply-To header contains the Call-ID of the   dialog to which it is replying, special attention is required, as   described inSection 5.1.1 (Call-ID), regardless of the priv-value orMunakata                      Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   presence of a Privacy header.  Once a privacy service modifies a   Call-ID in the request, a privacy service should restore the former   value in an In-Reply-To header, if present in the INVITE request   replying to the original request, as long as the privacy service   maintains the dialog state.   Example:   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1, Privacy:user) > PS > INV(Call-ID:C2) > Bob   Bob   > INV(In-Reply-To:C2, Privacy:none) > PS >           INV(In-Reply-To:C1) > Alice   Note: This is possible only if the privacy service maintains the         state and retains all the information that it modified to         provide privacy even after the dialog has been terminated,         which is unlikely.  Call-back is difficult to achieve when a         privacy service is involved in forming the dialog to be         referenced.5.1.7.  Organization   This field contains additional information about the user.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not add an Organization header as implied inSection 4.1 in   RFC 3323.   A privacy service MUST delete the Organization header if one exists   when user privacy is requested with Privacy:user as indicated inSection 5.3 in RFC 3323.  A privacy service SHOULD NOT add an   Organization header when user privacy is requested with Privacy:   header as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.5.1.8.  P-Asserted-Identity   This header contains a network-verified and network-asserted identity   of the user sending a SIP message.   A privacy service MUST delete the P-Asserted-Identity headers when   user privacy is requested with Privacy:id as indicated inSection 7   in RFC 3325 and should delete the P-Asserted-Identity headers when   user privacy is requested with Privacy:header before it forwards the   message to an entity that is not trusted.   It is recommended for a privacy service to remove the P-Asserted-   Identity header if user privacy is requested with Privacy:id or   Privacy:header even when forwarding to a trusted entity, unless it   can be confident that the message will not be routed to an untrusted   entity without going through another privacy service.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20105.1.9.  Record-Route   This field may reveal information about the administrative domain of   the user.   In order to hide Record-Route headers while keeping routability to   the sender, privacy services can execute a practice referred to as   "stripping".  Stripping means removing all the Record-Route headers   that have been added to the request prior to its arrival at the   privacy service and then adding a single Record-Route header   representing itself.  In this case, the privacy service needs to   retain the removed headers and restore them in a response.   Alternatively, privacy services can remove the Record-Route headers   and encrypt them into a single Record-Route header field.  In this   case, the privacy service needs to decrypt the header and restore the   former values in a response.   A privacy service SHOULD strip or encrypt any Record-Route headers   that have been added to a message before it reaches the privacy   service when user privacy is requested with Privacy:header as   indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.   As in the case of a Call-ID, if a privacy service modifies the   Record-Route headers, it MUST be able to restore Route headers with   retained values as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.  Some   examples where the restoration of the Route headers is necessary and   unnecessary are given below.   When a UAC (Alice) requires privacy for a request, a privacy service   does not have to restore the Route headers in the subsequent request   (see Example 1).   On the other hand, when a UAS (User Agent Server) (Bob) requires   privacy for a response, a privacy service has to restore the Route   headers in the subsequent request (see Example 2).   Example 1:   Restoration of Route header is UNNECESSARY when UAC requires privacy   Alice > INV(Privacy:header) > P1 >           INV(Record-Route:P1, Privacy:header) > PS >           INV(Record-Route:PS) > P2 >           INV(Record-Route:P2,PS) > Bob   Bob   > 200(Record-Route:P2,PS) > P2 > PS >           200(Record-Route:P2,PS,P1) > P1 > Alice   Alice > re-INV(Route:P2,PS,P1, Privacy:header) > P1 >           re-INV(Route:P2,PS, Privacy:header) > PS >           re-INV(Route:P2) > P2 > re-INV > BobMunakata                      Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010 Alice             P1                PS                P2            Bob |                 |                 |                 |               | | INV Priv        |INV Priv RR:P1   | INV RR:PS       | INV RR:P2,PS  | |---------------->|---------------->|---------------->|-------------->| |                 |                 |                 |               | | 200 RR:P2,PS,P1 | 200 RR:P2,PS,P1 | 200 RR:P2,PS    | 200 RR:P2,PS  | |<----------------|<----------------|<----------------|<--------------| |                 |                 |                 |               | | INV R:P2,PS,P1  | INV R:P2,PS     | INV R:P2        | INV           | |---------------->|---------------->|---------------->|-------------->| |                 |                 |                 |               |     Figure 1: Example when restoration of Route header is UNNECESSARY   Example 2:   Restoration of Route header is NECESSARY when UAS requires privacy   Alice > INV > P1 > INV(Record-Route:P1) > P2 >           INV(Record-Route:P2,P1) > Bob   Bob   > 200(Record-Route:P2,P1, Privacy:header) > P2 > PS' >           200(Record-Route:PS',P1) > P1 > Alice   Alice > re-INV(Route:PS',P1) > P1 > re-INV(Route:PS') > PS' >           re-INV(Route:P2) > P2 > Bob Alice           P1                PS'               P2              Bob |               |                 |                 |                 | | INV           |INV RR:P1        |                 | INV RR:P2,P1    | |-------------->|---------------------------------->|---------------->| |               |                 |                 |                 | | 200 RR:PS',P1 | 200 RR:PS',P1   |200 Priv RR:P2,P1|200 Priv RR:P2,P1| |<--------------|<----------------|<----------------|<----------------| |               |                 |                 |                 | | INV R:PS',P1  | INV R:PS'       | INV R:P2        | INV             | |-------------->|---------------->|---------------->|---------------->| |               |                 | (Restored)      |                 |     Figure 2: Example when restoration of Route header is NECESSARY   Note: In Figures 1 and 2, Priv means Privacy:header, RR means Record-         Route header, and R means Route header.5.1.10.  Referred-By   The Referred-By [RFC3892] header carries a SIP URI representing the   identity of the referrer.   The Referred-By header is an anonymization target when the REFER   request with the Referred-By header is sent by the user (referrer)   whose privacy is requested to be processed in the privacy service.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   A user agent that constructs REFER requests executing a user-level   privacy function on its own should anonymize a Referred-By header by   using an anonymous URI.   A privacy service should anonymize a Referred-By header in a REFER   request by using an anonymous URI when user privacy is requested with   Privacy:user.   On the other hand, the Referred-By header is not an anonymization   target when it appears in a request other than REFER (e.g., INVITE)   because the URI in the Referred-By header does not represent the   sender of the request.   Example 1:   Referrer requests no privacy and referee requests privacy   Alice > REF(Referred-By:Alice) > Bob   Bob   > INV(Referred-By:Alice, Privacy:user) > PS >           INV(Referred-By:Alice) > Carol   Example 2:   Referrer requests privacy and referee requests privacy   Alice > REF(Referred-By:Alice, Privacy:user) > PS >           REF(Referred-By:X) > Bob   Bob   > INV(Referred-By:X, Privacy:user) > PS >           INV(Referred-By:X) > Carol5.1.11.  Reply-To   This field contains a URI that can be used to reach the user on   subsequent call-backs.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not add a Reply-To header in the message as implied inSection4.1 in RFC 3323.   A privacy service MUST delete a Reply-To header when user privacy is   requested with Privacy:user as indicated inSection 5.3 in RFC 3323.5.1.12.  Server   This field contains information about the software used by the UAS to   handle the request.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not add a Server header in the response as implied inSection4.1 in RFC 3323.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   A privacy service must delete a Server header in a response when user   privacy is requested with Privacy:user.  A privacy service SHOULD NOT   add a Server header in a response when user privacy is requested with   Privacy:header as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.5.1.13.  Subject   This field contains free-form text about the subject of the call.  It   may include text describing something about the user.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not include any information identifying the caller in a   Subject header.   A privacy service MUST delete a Subject header when user privacy is   requested with Privacy:user as indicated inSection 5.3 in RFC 3323.5.1.14.  User-Agent   This field contains the UAC's information.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not add a User-Agent header as implied in Section 4.1 inRFC3323.   A privacy service MUST delete a User-Agent header when user privacy   is requested with Privacy:user as indicated in Section 5.3 inRFC3323.5.1.15.  Via   The bottommost Via header added by a user agent contains the IP   address and port or hostname that are used to reach the user agent   for responses.  Via headers added by proxies may reveal information   about the administrative domain of the user.   A user agent MUST NOT anonymize a Via header as indicated inSection4.1.1.3 in RFC 3323, unless it can obtain an IP address that is   functional yet has a characteristic of anonymity.  This may be   possible by obtaining an IP address specifically for this purpose   either from the service provider or through features such as TURN.   A privacy service SHOULD strip or encrypt any Via headers that have   been added prior to reaching the privacy service when user privacy is   requested with Privacy:header as indicated in Section 5.1 inRFC3323.  Refer toSection 5.1.9 (Record-Route) for details of stripping   and encryption.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   A privacy service MUST restore the original values of Via headers   when handling a response in order to route the response to the   originator as indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323.   No Via stripping is required when handling responses.5.1.16.  Warning   This field may contain the hostname of the UAS.   A user agent executing a user-level privacy function on its own   should not include the hostname representing its identity in a   Warning header.   A privacy service should anonymize a Warning header by deleting the   hostname portion (if it represents a UAS's identity) from the header   when user privacy is requested with Privacy:user.5.2.  Target SDP Parameters   This section describes privacy considerations for each SDP [RFC4566]   parameter that may reveal information about the user.   When privacy functions for user-inserted information are requested to   be executed at a privacy service, user agents MUST NOT encrypt SDP   bodies in messages as indicated inSection 4.2 in RFC 3323.5.2.1.  c/m Lines   The c and m lines in the SDP body convey the IP address and port for   receiving media.   A user agent must not anonymize the IP address and port in the c and   m lines, unless it can obtain an IP address that is functional yet   has a characteristic of anonymity as implied inSection 4.1.1.3 in   RFC 3323.  This may be possible by obtaining an IP address   specifically for this purpose either from the service provider or   through features such as TURN.   A privacy service must anonymize the IP address and port in c and m   lines using a functional anonymous IP address and port when user   privacy is requested with Privacy:session.  This is generally done by   replacing the IP address and port present in the SDP with that of a   relay server.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20105.2.2.  o Line   The username and IP address in this parameter may reveal information   about the user.   A user agent may anonymize the username in an o line by setting   username to "-" and anonymize the IP address in the o line by   replacing it with a value so that it is sufficiently unique.   A privacy service must anonymize the username and IP address in the o   line by setting the username to "-" and replacing the IP address with   a value so that it is sufficiently unique when user privacy is   requested with Privacy:session.5.2.3.  i/u/e/p Lines   These lines may contain information about the user.   A user agent executing a session-level privacy function on its own   should not include user's information in the i, u, e, and p lines.   A privacy service should modify the i, u, e, and p lines to delete   the user's identity information when user privacy is requested with   Privacy:session.5.3.  Considerations for Non-Target SIP Headers/Parameters5.3.1.  Identity/Identity-Info   The Identity [RFC4474] header field contains a signature used for   validating the identity.  The Identity-Info header field contains a   reference to the certificate of the signer of Identity headers.  An   Identity-Info header may reveal information about the administrative   domain of the user.   The signature in an Identity header provides integrity protection   over the From, To, Call-ID, Cseq, Date, and Contact headers and over   the message body.  The integrity protection is violated if a privacy   service modifies these headers and/or the message body for the   purpose of user privacy protection.   Once those integrity-protected headers (such as From and Call-ID) are   modified, the Identity/Identity-Info header fields are not valid any   more.  Thus, a privacy service acting on a request for Privacy:user,   Privacy:header, or Privacy:session can invalidate integrity   protection provided by an upstream authentication service that has   inserted Identity/Identity-Info header fields.  The use of such a   privacy service should be avoided if integrity protect needs to beMunakata                      Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   retained.  Otherwise, if the privacy service invalidates the   integrity protection, it should remove the Identity/Identity-Info   header fields.   An authentication service downstream of the privacy service may add   Identity/Identity-Info header fields if the domain name of the From   header field URI has not been anonymized (e.g.,   'sip:anonymous@example.com'), which makes it possible for the service   to authenticate the UAC.  This authenticated yet anonymous From   header means "this is a known user in my domain that I have   authenticated, but I am keeping its identity private" as indicated inSection 12 in RFC 4474.   The desired deployment will have a privacy service located before or   co-located with the identity service; thus, integrity and privacy can   both be provided seamlessly.5.3.2.  Path   This field may contain information about the administrative domain   and/or the visited domain of the user agent.  However, the Path   header is not the target of any priv-values.   Given that the Path header [RFC3327] only appears in REGISTER   requests/responses and is essential for a call to reach the   registered UA in the visited domain, it serves no purpose to withhold   or hide the information contained in the Path header; rather, it is   harmful.   The only reason privacy may be considered desirable is if the visited   domain wants to withhold its topology from the home domain of the   user.  In doing so, the domain withholding the topology needs to   ensure that it provides sufficient information so that the home   domain can route the call to the visited domain, thus reaching the   UA.   However, anonymization of network-privacy-sensitive information is   out of scope.5.3.3.  Replaces Header/Parameter   The Replaces [RFC3891] header and the "replaces" parameter contain   identifiers of a dialog to be replaced, which are composed of Call-   ID, local tag, and remote tag.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   The sender of the INVITE with a Replaces header is usually not the   originating user agent or terminating user agent of the target dialog   to be replaced.  Therefore, the Call-ID within the Replaces header is   unlikely to be generated by the sender, and thus this header is   outside the anonymization target per priv-value.   The "replaces" parameter, which appears in a Refer-To header in a   REFER request, is not the target of any particular priv-values   either.  As described inSection 5.1.1 (Call-ID), regardless of the   priv-value or the presence of a Privacy header, once a privacy   service modifies a Call-ID in the request, it should monitor headers   that may contain Call-ID and restore the portion of the value   representing the modified Call-ID to the original Call-ID value in a   Replaces header received.   The main challenge for this to function properly is that a privacy   service has to be on a signaling path to the originator for every   dialog.  This is generally not possible and results in REFER requests   not functioning at all times.  This is a trade-off that is   anticipated when privacy is imposed.   The privacy requirements mentioned inSection 5.1.1 will cause the   Replaces header and "replaces" parameter to contain values that will   fail the resulting dialog establishment in some situations.  This   loss of functionality is allowed and/or intended as illustrated above   (i.e., it is not the responsibility of a privacy service to ensure   that these features always work).   The functionality of the Replaces header/parameter when anonymized   depends on the circumstances in which it is used.  REFER may work or   may not work depending on the following three criteria.   1. Who generated the Call-ID.   2. Where the privacy service is on the signaling path.   3. Who initiates the REFER with the "replaces" parameter.   A few examples that explore when the Replaces header/parameter works   or fails are given below.   Example 1:   Transfer initiated by the originator, PS added for first INV and REF   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1, Privacy:user) > PS > INV(Call-ID:C2) > Bob   Alice > REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C1, Privacy:user) > PS >           REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C2) > Carol   Carol > INV(Replaces:C2) > Bob (SUCCEED)Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   Example 2:   Transfer initiated by the originator, PS added only for first INV   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1, Privacy:user) > PS > INV(Call-ID:C2) > Bob   Alice > REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C1) > Carol   Carol > INV(Replaces:C1) > Bob (FAIL)   Note: Example 2 would succeed if the same PS (that modifies the Call-         ID in the INVITE from Alice) is also added for REFER and         modifies the value in the "replaces" parameter from C1 to C2         even if there is no Privacy header in the REFER.   Example 3:   Transfer initiated by the originator, PS added only for REF   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1) > INV(Call-ID:C1) > Bob   Alice > REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C1, Privacy:user) > PS >           REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C1) > Carol   Carol > INV(Replaces:C1, Privacy:user) > PS' >           INV(Replaces:C1) > Bob (SUCCEED)   Example 4:   Transfer initiated by the terminating party, PS added for both INV   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1, Privacy:user) > PS > INV(Call-ID:C2) > Bob   Bob   > REF(Refer-To:Alice?Replaces=C2) > Carol   Carol > INV(Replaces:C2) > PS > INV(Replaces:C1) > Alice (SUCCEED)   Note: Example 4 succeeds because the same PS (that modifies the Call-         ID in the INVITE from Alice) checks the incoming requests and         modifies the value in a Replaces header in the INVITE from         Carol to the former value of Call-ID (C1).   Example 5:   Hold, PS added only for first INV   Alice > INV(Call-ID:C1, Privacy:user) > PS > INV(Call-ID:C2) > Bob   Alice > REF(Refer-To:Bob?Replaces=C1) > Music-Server   Music-Server > INV(Replaces:C1) > Bob (FAIL)   Note: Example 5 would succeed if the same PS (that modifies the Call-         ID in the INVITE from Alice) is added for the INVITE from the         Music-Server and modifies the value in a Replaces header from         C1 to C2.   As the above examples show, in some scenarios, information carried in   the Replaces header/parameter would result in failure of the REFER.   This will not happen if the Call-ID is not modified at a privacy   service.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20105.3.4.  Route   This field may contain information about the administrative domain of   the user agent, but the Route header is not the target of any priv-   values.   Route headers appear only in SIP requests to force routing through   the listed set of proxies.  If a privacy service anonymizes the Route   header, the routing does not function.  Furthermore, there is no risk   in revealing the information in the Route headers to further network   entities, including the terminating user agent, because a proxy   removes the value from the Route header when it replaces the value in   the Request-URI as defined inRFC 3261.   A privacy service that modifies Record-Route headers may need to   restore the values in Route headers as necessary.  As indicated inSection 5.1 in RFC 3323, if a privacy service modifies the Record-   Route headers, it MUST be able to restore Route headers with retained   values.  Please refer toSection 5.1.9 (Record-Route) for further   detail and examples.5.3.5.  Service-Route   Service-Route headers [RFC3608] appear only in 200 OK responses to   REGISTER requests and contain information about the registrar.  The   purpose of the privacy mechanism defined inRFC 3323 is to secure the   user's privacy, so the case where a registrar sets a Privacy header   is not considered here.  Therefore, the Service-Route header is not   the target of any priv-values.5.3.6.  Target-Dialog   The Target-Dialog [RFC4538] header faces exactly the same issues as   seen for the Replaces header.  Please refer toSection 5.3.3   (Replaces Header/Parameter) for why this is not a target for any   particular priv-values and how a privacy service still needs to   evaluate and modify the value contained, even if no privacy is   requested.6.  Security Considerations   This guideline document adds no new security considerations to those   discussed in [RFC3323], [RFC3325], and [RFC4244].Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 20107.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank John Elwell, Jon Peterson, Jonathan   Rosenberg, Mary Barnes, Paul Kyzivat, and Roland Jesske for their   reviews and comments.8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,              A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.              Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol",RFC 3261,              June 2002.   [RFC3323]  Peterson, J., "A Privacy Mechanism for the Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 3323, November 2002.   [RFC3325]  Jennings, C., Peterson, J., and M. Watson, "Private              Extensions to the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) for              Asserted Identity within Trusted Networks",RFC 3325,              November 2002.   [RFC4244]  Barnes, M., Ed., "An Extension to the Session Initiation              Protocol (SIP) for Request History Information",RFC 4244,              November 2005.8.2.  Informative References   [TURN]     Rosenberg, J., Mahy, R., and P. Matthews, "Traversal Using              Relays around NAT (TURN): Relay Extensions to Session              Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)", Work in Progress,              July 2008.   [SIPGRUU]  Rosenberg, J., "Obtaining and Using Globally Routable User              Agent URIs (GRUUs) in the Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP)",RFC 5627, October 2009.   [RFC3315]  Droms, R., Ed., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins,              C., and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol              for IPv6 (DHCPv6)",RFC 3315, July 2003.   [RFC3327]  Willis, D. and B. Hoeneisen, "Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP) Extension Header Field for Registering Non-Adjacent              Contacts",RFC 3327, December 2002.Munakata                      Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 5379                 SIP Privacy Guidelines            February 2010   [RFC3608]  Willis, D. and B. Hoeneisen, "Session Initiation Protocol              (SIP) Extension Header Field for Service Route Discovery              During Registration",RFC 3608, October 2003.   [RFC3891]  Mahy, R., Biggs, B., and R. Dean, "The Session Initiation              Protocol (SIP) "Replaces" Header",RFC 3891, September              2004.   [RFC3892]  Sparks, R., "The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)              Referred-By Mechanism",RFC 3892, September 2004.   [RFC4474]  Peterson, J. and C. Jennings, "Enhancements for              Authenticated Identity Management in the Session              Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4474, August 2006.   [RFC4538]  Rosenberg, J., "Request Authorization through Dialog              Identification in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)",RFC 4538, June 2006.   [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session              Description Protocol",RFC 4566, July 2006.Authors' Addresses   Mayumi Munakata   NTT Corporation   Phone: +81 422 36 7502   EMail: munakata.mayumi@lab.ntt.co.jp   Shida Schubert   NTT Corporation   EMail: shida@ntt-at.com   Takumi Ohba   NTT Corporation   9-11, Midori-cho 3-Chome   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   Japan   Phone: +81 422 59 7748   EMail: ohba.takumi@lab.ntt.co.jpMunakata                      Informational                    [Page 23]

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