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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                         C. EllisonRequest for Comments: 2692                                         IntelCategory: Experimental                                    September 1999SPKI RequirementsStatus of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.   Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   The IETF Simple Public Key Infrastructure [SPKI] Working Group is   tasked with producing a certificate structure and operating procedure   to meet the needs of the Internet community for trust management in   as easy, simple and extensible a way as possible.   The SPKI Working Group first established a list of things one might   want to do with certificates (attached at the end of this document),   and then summarized that list of desires into requirements.  This   document presents that summary of requirements.Table of Contents   Charter of the SPKI working group................................2   Background.......................................................2   General Requirements.............................................3   Validity and CRLs................................................4   Implementation of Certificates...................................4   List of Certificate Uses.........................................5   Open Questions..................................................11   References......................................................12   Security Considerations.........................................12   Author's Address................................................13   Full Copyright Statement........................................14Ellison                       Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999Charter of the SPKI working group   Many Internet protocols and applications which use the Internet   employ public key technology for security purposes and require a   public key infrastructure to manage public keys.   The task of the working group will be to develop Internet standards   for an IETF sponsored public key certificate format, associated   signature and other formats, and key acquisition protocols.  The key   certificate format and associated protocols are to be simple to   understand, implement, and use. For purposes of the working group,   the resulting formats and protocols are to be known as the Simple   Public Key Infrastructure, or SPKI.   The SPKI is intended to provide mechanisms to support security in a   wide range of Internet applications, including IPSEC protocols,   encrypted electronic mail and WWW documents, payment protocols, and   any other application which will require the use of public key   certificates and the ability to access them. It is intended that the   Simple Public Key Infrastructure will support a range of trust   models.Background   The term certificate traces back to the MIT bachelor's thesis of   Loren M. Kohnfelder [KOHN].  Kohnfelder, in turn, was responding to a   suggestion by Diffie and Hellman in their seminal paper [DH].  Diffie   and Hellman noted that with public key cryptography, one no longer   needs a secure channel over which to transmit secret keys between   communicants.  Instead, they suggested, one can publish a modified   telephone book -- one with public keys in place of telephone numbers.   One could then look up his or her desired communication partner in   the directory, find that person's public key and open a secure   channel to that person.  Kohnfelder took that suggestion and noted   that an on-line service has the disadvantage of being a performance   bottleneck.  To replace it, he proposed creation of digitally signed   directory entries which he called certificates.  In the time since   1978, the term certificate has frequently been assumed to mean a   binding between name and key.   The SPKI team directly addressed the issue of <name,key> bindings and   realized that such certificates are of extremely limited use for   trust management.  A keyholder's name is one attribute of the   keyholder, but as can be seen in the list of needs in this document,   a person's name is rarely of security interest.  A user of a   certificate needs to know whether a given keyholder has been granted   some specific authorization.Ellison                       Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999General Requirements   We define the term KEYHOLDER of a public key to refer to the person   or other entity that controls the corresponding private key.   The main purpose of an SPKI certificate is to authorize some action,   give permission, grant a capability, etc. to or for a keyholder.   The keyholder is most directly identified by the public key itself,   although for convenience or other purposes some indirection (delayed   binding) may be employed.  That indirection can be via a collision-   free hash of the public key or via a name, later to be resolved into   a key.   The definition of attributes or authorizations in a certificate is up   to the author of code which uses the certificate.  The creation of   new authorizations should not require interaction with any other   person or organization but rather be under the total control of the   author of the code using the certificate.   Because SPKI certificates might carry information that the keyholder   might not want to publish, we assume that certificates will be   distributed directly by the keyholder to the verifier.  If the   keyholder wishes to use a global repository, such as LDAP, the global   PGP key server or the DNS database, that is up to the keyholder and   not for the SPKI WG to specify.   Because SPKI certificates will carry information that, taken together   over all certificates, might constitute a dossier and therefore a   privacy violation, each SPKI certificate should carry the minimum   information necessary to get a job done.  The SPKI certificate is   then to be like a single key rather than a key ring or a single   credit card rather than a whole wallet.  The keyholder should be able   to release a minimum of information in order to prove his or her   permission to act.   It is necessary for at least some certificates to be anonymous.   Because one use of SPKI certificates is in secret balloting and   similar applications, an SPKI certificate must be able to assign an   attribute to a blinded signature key.   One attribute of a keyholder is a name.  There are names the   keyholder prefers to be called and there are names by which the   keyholder is known to various other keyholders.  An SPKI certificate   must be able to bind a key to such names.  The SDSI work of Rivest   and Lampson has done an especially good job of defining and using   local name spaces, therefore if possible SPKI should support the SDSIEllison                       Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999   name construct.  [Note: SPKI and SDSI have merged.]Validity and CRLs   An SPKI certificate, like any other, should be able to carry a   validity period: dates within which it is valid.  It may also be   necessary to have on-line refinement of validity.  This is frequently   achieved via a Certificate Revocation List (CRL) in previous   certificate designs.   A minimal CRL contains a list of revoked certificates, identified   uniquely, a sequence number and a signature.  Its method of   transmission is not specified.  If it encounters some certificate   that it lists, then it annihilates that certificate.  If it   encounters a previous CRL, as indicated by sequence number, then it   annihilates that previous CRL.  Such a CRL leads to non-deterministic   program behavior.  Therefore, we take as a requirement that if SPKI   uses CRLs, then the certificate that uses it must explicitly tell the   verifier where to find the CRL, the CRL must carry explicit validity   dates and the dates of a sequence of CRLs must not overlap.  Under   this set of requirements, behavior of certificate validation is   deterministic (aside from the question of clock skew).   A CRL is a negative statement.  It is the digital equivalent of the   little paper books of bad checks or bad credit cards that were   distributed to cashiers in the 1970's and before.  These have been   replaced in the retail world by positive statements -- on-line   validation of a single check, ATM card or credit card.   SPKI should support both positive and negative on-line validations.   Any CRL or revalidation instrument must have its own lifetime.  A   lifetime of 0 is not possible because of communication delays and   clock skews, although one can consider an instrument whose lifetime   is "one use" and which is delivered only as part of a   challenge/response protocol.Implementation of Certificates   The authorization certificates that are envisioned for SPKI (and   needed to meet the demands of the list given at the end of this   document) should be generated by any keyholder empowered to grant or   delegate the authorization in question.  The code to generate   certificates should be written by many different developers,   frequently persons acting alone, operating out of garages or dorm   rooms.  This leads to a number of constraints on the structure and   encoding of certificates.  In addition, SPKI certificates should be   usable in very constrained environments, such as smart cards or smallEllison                       Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999   embedded systems.  The code to process them and the memory to store   them should both be as small as possible.   An SPKI certificate should be as simple as possible.  There should be   a bare minimum of fields necessary to get the job done and there   should be an absolute minimum of optional fields.  In particular, the   structure should be specific enough that the creator of a certificate   is constrained by the structure definition, not by complaints (or   error messages) from the reader of a certificate.   An SPKI certificate should be described in as simple a method as   possible, relating directly to the kind of structures a C or PASCAL   programmer would normally write.   No library code should be required for the packing or parsing of SPKI   certificates.  In particular, ASN.1 is not to be used.   A certificate should be signed exactly as it is transmitted.  There   should be no reformatting called for in the process of checking a   certificate's signature (although one might canonicalize white space   during certificate input, for example, if the format is text).   For efficiency, if possible, an SPKI certificate should be encoded in   an LR(0) grammar.  That is, neither packing nor parsing of the   structure should require a scan of the data.  Data should be read   into the kind of structure a programmer would want to use without   touching the incoming bytes more than once.   For efficiency, if possible, an SPKI certificate should be packed and   parsed without any recursion.List of Certificate Uses   The list below is a brainstorming list, accumulated on the SPKI   mailing list, of uses of such certificates.      -  I need a certificate to give me permission to write electronic         checks.      -  My bank would need a certificate, proving to others that it is         a bank capable of cashing electronic checks and permitted to         give permission to people to write electronic checks.Ellison                       Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999      -  My bank would issue a certificate signing the key of a master         bank certifier -- perhaps NACHA -- so that I could follow a         certificate chain from a key I know (my bank's) to the key of         any other bank in the US and, similarly, to any other bank in         the world.      -  I might generate a certificate (a "reputation voucher") for a         friend to introduce him to another friend -- in which         certificate I could testify to my friend's political opinion         (e.g., libertarian cypherpunk) or physical characteristics or         anything else of interest.      -  I might have a certificate giving my security clearance, signed         by a governmental issuing authority.      -  I want a certificate for some software I have downloaded and am         considering running on my computer -- to make sure it hasn't         changed and that some reputable company or person stands behind         it.      -  I need certificates to bind names to public keys:         -  [traditional certificate] binding a key to a name, implying            "all the attributes of the real person having this name are            transferred to this key by this certificate".  This requires            unique identification of a person (which is difficult in            non-digital space, as it is) and someone trustworthy binding            that unique name to the key in question.  In this model, a            key starts out naked and acquires attributes, permissions            and authority from the person bound to it.         -  [direct certificate] binding a name to a key, implying "I            (the person who is able to use the associated private key to            make this signature) declare that I go by the name of            XXXXXXX."  The unique identification of the key is automatic            -- from the key itself or a cryptographic hash of the key.            The binding is done by the key itself -- in a self-signed            certificate.  In this model, a key is loaded with            attributes, permissions and authority directly by other            certificates, not indirectly through some person's name, and            this certificate declares only a name or nickname by which            the key's owner likes to be addressed.         -  [personal binding] binding a key to a nickname.  This kind            of certificate is signed by me, singing someone else's key            and binding it to a nickname by which I know that person.            It is for my use only -- never given out -- and is a signed            certificate to prevent tampering with my own privateEllison                       Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999            directory of keys.  It says nothing about how I certified            the binding to my own satisfaction between the key and my            friend.      -  I might be doing genealogy and be collecting what amounts to         3x5 cards with facts to be linked together.  Some of these         links would be from one content to another reference [e.g.,         indexing and cross-referencing].  Others might be links to the         researcher who collected the fact.  By rights, the fact should         be signed by that researcher.  Viewing only the signature on         the fact and the link to the researcher, this electronic 3x5         card becomes a certificate.      -  I want to sign a contract to buy a house.  What kind of         certificate do I need?      -  I have found someone on the net and she sounds really nice.         Things are leading up to cybersex.  How do I make sure she's         not really some 80-year-old man in a nursing home?      -  I have met someone on the net and would like a picture of her         and her height, weight and other measurements from a         trustworthy source.      -  Can I have a digital marriage license?      -  Can I have a digital divorce decree?      -  ..a digital Voter Registration Card?      -  There are a number of cards one carries in a typical wallet         which could become certificates attached to a public key:      -  health insurance card      -  prescription drug card      -  driver's license (for permission to drive)      -  driver's license (for permission to buy alcohol)      -  supermarket discount card      -  supermarket check-cashing card [I know -- anachronism]      -  Blockbuster Video rental card      -  ATM cardEllison                       Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999      -  Credit card      -  membership card in the ACLU, NRA, Republican party, Operation         Rescue, NARAL, ACM, IEEE, ICAR....      -  Red Cross blood donor card      -  Starbuck's Coffee buy-10-get-1-free card      -  DC Metro fare card      -  Phone calling card      -  Alumni Association card      -  REI Membership card      -  Car insurance card      -  claim check for a suitcase      -  claim check for a pawned radio      -  authorization for followup visits to a doctor, after surgery      -  Better Business Bureau [BBB] style reputation certificates         [testimonies from satisfied customers]      -  BBB-style certificate that no complaints exist against a         business or doctor or dentist, etc.      -  LDS Temple Recommend      -  Stock certificate      -  Stock option      -  Car title      -  deed to land      -  proof of ownership of electronic equipment with an ID number      -  time card certificate [activating a digital time clock]      -  proof of degree earned [PhD, LLD, MD, ...]      -  permission to write digitally signed prescriptions for drugsEllison                       Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999      -  permission to spend up to $X of a company's money      -  permission to issue nuclear launch codes      -  I'm a sysadmin, I want to carry a certificate, signed by SAGE,         that says I'm good at the things sysadmins are good at.      -  I'm that same sysadmin, I want an ephemeral certificate that         grants me root access to certain systems for the day, or the         week, or...         Certain applications *will* want some form of auditing, but the         audit identity should be in the domain of the particular         application...  For instance an "is a system administrator of         this host" certificate would probably want to include an audit         identity, so you can figure out which of your multiple admins         screwed something up.      -  I'm an amateur radio operator.  I want a signed certificate         that says I'm allowed to engage in amateur radio, issued by the         DOC.  [I currently have a paper version of one].  This would be         useful in enforcing access policies to the amateur spectrum;         and in tracking abuse of that same spectrum.  Heck!  extend         this concept to all licensed spectrum users.      -  I'm the a purchasing agent for a large corporation.  I want to         posses a certificate that tells our suppliers that I'm         authorized to make purchases up to $15,000.  I don't want the         suppliers to know my name, lest their sales people bug me too         much.  I don't want to have to share a single "Megacorp         Purchasing Department Certificate" with others doing the same         job [the private key would need to be shared--yuck!].      -  "This signed-key should be considered equivalent to the         certifying-key until this certificate expires for the following         purposes ..."            [This is desirable when you wish to reduce the exposure of            long-term keys.  One way to do this is to use smart cards,            but those typically have slow processors and are connected            through low-bandwidth links; however, if you only use the            smart card at "login" time to certify a short-term key pair,            you get high performance and low exposure of the long term            key.Ellison                       Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999            I'll note here that this flies in the face of attempts to            prevent delegation of certain rights.  Maybe we need a            "delegation-allowed" bit -- but there's nothing to stop            someone who wishes to delegate against the rules from also            loaning out their private key.].      -  "I am the current legitimate owner of a particular chunk of         Internet address space."            [I'd like to see IPSEC eventually become usable, at least            for privacy, without need for prior arrangement between            sites, but I think there's a need for a "I own this            address"/"I own this address range" certificate in order for            IPSEC to coexist with existing ip-address-based firewalls.]      -  "I am the current legitimate owner of a this DNS name or         subtree."      -  "I am the legitimate receiver of mail sent to thisrfc822 email         address.  [this might need to be signed by a key which itself         had been certified by the appropriate "DNS name owner"         certificate]."            [This is in case I know someone owns a particular e-mail            address but I don't know their key.]      -  Encryption keys for E-mail and file encryption      -  Authentication of people or other entities      -  Digital signatures (unforgeability)      -  Timestamping / notary services      -  Host authentication      -  Service authentication         Other requirements:         -  Trust model must be a web (people want to choose whom they            trust).  People must be able to choose whom they trust or            consider reliable roots (maybe with varying reliabilities).         -  Some applications (e.g., notary services) require highly            trusted keys; generation complexity is not an issue here.         -  Some applications (e.g., host authentication) require            extremely light (or no) bureaucracy.  Even communication            with the central administrator may be a problem.Ellison                       Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999         -  Especially in lower-end applications (e.g. host            authentication) the people generating the keys (e.g.,            administrators) will change, and you will no longer want            them to be able to certify.  On the other hand, you will            usually also not want all keys they have generated to            expire.  This may imply a "certification right expiration"            certificate requirement, probably to be implemented together            with notary services.         -  Keys will need to be cached locally to avoid long delays            fetching frequently used keys.  Cf. current name servers.            The key infrastructure may in future get used almost as            often as the name server.  The caching and performance            requirements are similar.         -  Reliable distribution of key revocations and other            certificates (e.g., the ceasing of the right to make new            certificates).  May involve goals like "will have spread            everywhere in 24 hours" or something like that.  This            interacts with caching.Open Questions   Given such certificates, there remain some questions, most to do with   proofs of the opposite of what a certificate is designed to do.   These do not have answers provided by certificate definition or   issuing alone.   -  Someone digitally signs a threatening e-mail message with my      private key and sends it to president@whitehouse.gov.  How do I      prove that I didn't compose and send the message?  What kind of      certificate characteristic might help me in this?         This is an issue of (non-)repudiation and therefore a matter of         private key protection.  Although this is of interest to the         user of certificates, certificate format, contents or issuing         machinery can not ensure the protection of a user's private key         or prove whether or not a private key has been stolen or         misused.   -  Can certificates help do a title scan for purchase of a house?         Certificates might be employed to carry information in a         tamper-proof way, but building the database necessary to record         all house titles and all liens is a project not related to         certificate structure.Ellison                       Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999   -  Can a certificate be issued to guarantee that I am not already      married, so that I can then get a digital marriage license?         The absence of attributes can be determined only if all         relevant records are digitized and all parties have inescapable         IDs.  The former is not likely to happen in our lifetimes and         the latter receives political resistance.         A certificate can communicate the 'positive' attribute "not         already married" or "not registered as a voter in any other         district".  That assumes that some organization is capable of         determining that fact for a given keyholder.  The method of         determining such a negative fact is not part of the certificate         definition.   -  The assumption in most certificates is that the proper user will      protect his private key very well, to prevent anyone else from      accessing his funds.  However, in some cases the certificate      itself might have monetary value [permission to prescribe drugs,      permission to buy alcohol, ...].  What is to prevent the holder of      such a certificate from loaning out his private key?         This is a potential flaw in any system providing authorization         and an interesting topic for study.  What prevents a doctor or         dentist from selling prescriptions for controlled substances to         drug abusers?References   [DH]   Diffie and Hellman, "New Directions in Cryptography", IEEE          Transactions on Information Theory IT-22, 6 (Nov. 1976), 644-          654.   [KOHN] Loren Kohnfelder, "Towards a Practical Public-key          Cryptosystem", Bachelor's thesis, MIT, May, 1978.Security Considerations   Security issues are discussed throughout this memo.Ellison                       Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999Author's Address   Carl M. Ellison   Intel Corporation   2111 NE 25th Ave   M/S JF3-212   Hillsboro OR 97124-5961 USA   Phone: +1-503-264-2900   Fax:   +1-503-264-6225   EMail: carl.m.ellison@intel.com          cme@alum.mit.edu   Web:http://www.pobox.com/~cmeEllison                       Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 2692                   SPKI Requirements              September 1999Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Ellison                       Experimental                     [Page 14]

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