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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Architecture Board (IAB)                             J. JimenezRequest for Comments: 8477                                 H. TschofenigCategory: Informational                                        D. ThalerISSN: 2070-1721                                             October 2018Report from the Internet of Things (IoT)Semantic Interoperability (IOTSI) Workshop 2016Abstract   This document provides a summary of the "Workshop on Internet of   Things (IoT) Semantic Interoperability (IOTSI)", which took place in   Santa Clara, California March 17-18, 2016.  The main goal of the   workshop was to foster a discussion on the different approaches used   by companies and Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) to   accomplish interoperability at the application layer.  This report   summarizes the discussions and lists recommendations to the standards   community.  The views and positions in this report are those of the   workshop participants and do not necessarily reflect those of the   authors or the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), which organized the   workshop.  Note that this document is a report on the proceedings of   the workshop.  The views and positions documented in this report are   those of the workshop participants and do not necessarily reflect IAB   views and positions.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)   and represents information that the IAB has deemed valuable to   provide for permanent record.  It represents the consensus of the   Internet Architecture Board (IAB).  Documents approved for   publication by the IAB are not candidates for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttps://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8477.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2018 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   (https://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.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  What Problems to Solve  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.  Translation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75.  Dealing with Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .108.  Collaboration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .119.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12Appendix A.  Program Committee  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14Appendix B.  Accepted Position Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14Appendix C.  List of Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17   IAB Members at the Time of Approval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 20181.  Introduction   The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) holds occasional workshops   designed to consider long-term issues and strategies for the   Internet, and to suggest future directions for the Internet   architecture.  The investigated topics often require coordinated   efforts from many organizations and industry bodies to improve an   identified problem.  One of the targets of the workshops is to   establish communication between relevant organizations, especially   when the topics are out of the scope of the Internet Engineering Task   Force (IETF).  This long-term planning function of the IAB is   complementary to the ongoing engineering efforts performed by working   groups of the IETF.   With the expansion of the Internet of Things (IoT), interoperability   becomes more and more important.  Standards Developing Organizations   (SDOs) have done a tremendous amount of work to standardize new   protocols and profile existing protocols.   At the application layer and at the level of solution frameworks,   interoperability is not yet mature.  Particularly, the work on data   formats (in the form of data models and information models) has not   seen the same level of consistency throughout SDOs.   One common problem is the lack of an encoding-independent   standardization of the information, the so-called information model.   Another problem is the strong relationship between data formats and   the underlying communication architecture, such as a design in Remote   Procedure Call (RPC) style or a RESTful design (where REST refers to   Representational State Transfer).  Furthermore, groups develop   solutions that are very similar on the surface but differ slightly in   their standardized outcome, leading to interoperability problems.   Finally, some groups favor different encodings for use with various   application-layer protocols.   Thus, the IAB decided to organize a workshop to reach out to relevant   stakeholders to explore the state of the art and identify commonality   and gaps [IOTSIAG] [IOTSIWS].  In particular, the IAB was interested   to learn about the following aspects:   o  What is the state of the art in data and information models?  What      should an information model look like?   o  What is the role of formal languages, such as schema languages, in      describing information and data models?   o  What is the role of metadata, which is attached to data to make it      self-describing?Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   o  How can we achieve interoperability when different organizations,      companies, and individuals develop extensions?   o  What is the experience with interworking various data models      developed from different groups, or with data models that evolved      over time?   o  What functionality should online repositories for sharing schemas      have?   o  How can existing data models be mapped against each other to offer      interworking?   o  Is there room for harmonization, or are the use cases of different      groups and organizations so unique that there is no possibility      for cooperation?   o  How can organizations better work together to increase awareness      and information sharing?2.  Terminology   The first roadblock to interoperability at the level of data models   is the lack of a common vocabulary to start the discussion.   [RFC3444] provides a starting point by separating conceptual models   for designers, or "information models", from concrete detailed   definitions for implementers, or "data models".  There are concepts   that are undefined in that RFC and elsewhere, such as the interaction   with the resources of an endpoint, or "interaction model".   Therefore, the three "main" common models that were identified were:   Information Model      An information model defines an environment at the highest level      of abstraction and expresses the desired functionality.      Information models can be defined informally (e.g., in prose) or      more formally (e.g., Unified Modeling Language (UML), Entity-      Relationship Diagrams, etc.).  Implementation details are hidden.   Data Model      A data model defines concrete data representations at a lower      level of abstraction, including implementation- and protocol-      specific details.  Some examples are SNMP Management Information      Base (MIB) modules, World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Thing      Description (TD) Things, YANG modules, Lightweight Machine-to-      Machine (LwM2M) Schemas, Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF)      Schemas, and so on.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   Interaction Model      An interaction model defines how data is accessed and retrieved      from the endpoints, being, therefore, tied to the specific      communication pattern that the system has (e.g., REST methods,      Publish/Subscribe operations, or RPC calls).   Another identified terminology issue is the semantic meaning overload   that some terms have.  The meaning can vary depending on the context   in which the term is used.  Some examples of such terms are as   follows: semantics, models, encoding, serialization format, media   types, and encoding types.  Due to time constraints, no concrete   terminology was agreed upon, but work will continue within each   organization to create various terminology documents.  The   participants agreed to set up a GitHub repository [IOTSIGIT] for   sharing information.3.  What Problems to Solve   The participants agreed that there is not simply a single problem to   be solved but rather a range of problems.  During the workshop, the   following problems were discussed:   o  Formal Languages for Documentation Purposes   To simplify review and publication, SDOs need formal descriptions of   their data and interaction models.  Several of them use a tabular   representation found in the specification itself but use a formal   language as an alternative way of describing objects and resources   for formal purposes.  Some examples of formal language use are as   follows.   The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA), now OMA SpecWorks, used an XML Schema   [LWM2M-Schema] to describe their object and resource definitions.   The XML files of standardized objects are available for download at   [OMNA].   The Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) defined Generic Attribute   Profile (GATT) services and characteristics for use with Bluetooth   Smart/Low Energy.  The services and characteristics are shown in a   tabular form on the Bluetooth SIG website [SIG] and are defined as   XML instance documents.   The Open Connectivity Foundation (OCF) uses JSON Schemas to formally   define data models and RESTful API Modeling Language (RAML) to define   interaction models.  The standard files are available online at   <oneIoTa.org>.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   The AllSeen Alliance uses AllJoyn Introspection XML to define data   and interaction models in the same formal language, tailored for   RPC-style interaction.  The standard files are available online on   the AllSeen Alliance website, but both standard and vendor-defined   model files can be obtained by directly querying a device for them at   runtime.   The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) uses the Resource Description   Framework (RDF) to define data and interaction models using a format   tailored for the web.   The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) uses YANG to define data   and interaction models.  Other SDOs may use various other formats.   o  Formal Languages for Code Generation   Code-generation tools that use formal data and information modeling   languages are needed by developers.  For example, the AllSeen Visual   Studio Plugin [AllSeen-Plugin] offers a wizard to generate code based   on the formal description of the data model.  Another example of a   data modeling language that can be used for code generation is YANG.   A popular tool to help with code generation of YANG modules is pyang   [PYANG].  An example of a tool that can generate code for multiple   ecosystems is OpenDOF [OpenDOF].  Use cases discussed for code   generation included easing development of server-side device   functionality, clients, and compliance tests.   o  Debugging Support   Debugging tools are needed that implement generic object browsers,   which use standard data models and/or retrieve formal language   descriptions from the devices themselves.  As one example, the nRF   Bluetooth Smart sniffer from Nordic Semiconductor [nRF-Sniffer] can   be used to display services and characteristics defined by the   Bluetooth SIG.  As another example, AllJoyn Explorer   [AllJoynExplorer] can be used to browse and interact with any   resource exposed by an AllJoyn device, including both standard and   vendor-defined data models, by retrieving the formal descriptions   from the device at runtime.   o  Translation   The working assumption is that devices need to have a common data   model with a priori knowledge of data types and actions.  However,   that would imply that each consortium/organization will try to define   their own data model.  That would cause a major interoperabilityJimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   problem, possibly a completely intractable one given the number of   variations, extensions, compositions, or versioning changes that will   happen for each data model.   Another potential approach is to have a minimal amount of information   on the device to allow for a runtime binding to a specific model, the   objective being to require as little prior knowledge as possible.   Moreover, gateways, bridges and other similar devices need to   dynamically translate (or map) one data model to another one.   Complexity will increase as there are also multiple protocols and   schemas that make interoperability harder to achieve.   o  Runtime Discovery   Runtime discovery allows IoT devices to exchange metadata about the   data, potentially along with the data exchanged itself.  In some   cases, the metadata not only describes data but also the interaction   model as well.  An example of such an approach has been shown with   Hypermedia as the Engine of Application State (HATEOAS) [HATEOAS].   Another example is that all AllJoyn devices support such runtime   discovery using a protocol mechanism called "introspection", where   the metadata is queried from the device itself [AllSeen].   There are various models, whether deployed or possible, for such   discovery.  The metadata might be extracted from a specification,   looked up on a cloud repository (e.g., oneIoTa for OCF models),   looked up via a vendor's site, or obtained from the device itself   (such as in the AllJoyn case).  The relevant metadata might be   obtained from the same place or different pieces might be obtained   from different places, such as separately obtaining (a) syntax   information, (b) end-user descriptions in a desired language, and (c)   developer-specific comments for implementers.4.  Translation   In an ideal world where organizations and companies cooperate and   agree on a single data model standard, there is no need for gateways   that translate from one data model to another one.  However, this is   far from reality today, and there are many proprietary data models in   addition to the already standardized ones.  As a consequence,   gateways are needed to translate between data models.  This leads to   (n^2)-n combinations, in the worst case.   There are analogies with gateways back in the 1980s that were used to   translate between network layer protocols.  Eventually, IP took over,   providing the necessary end-to-end interoperability at the network   layer.  Unfortunately, the introduction of gateways leads to the lossJimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   of expressiveness due to the translation between data models.  The   functionality of IP was so valuable in the market that advanced   features of other networking protocols became less attractive and   were not used anymore.   Participants discussed an alternative that they called a "red star",   shown in Figure 1, where data models are translated to a common data   model shown in the middle.  This reduces the number of translations   that are needed down to 2n (in the best case).  The problem, of   course, is that everyone wants their own data model to be the red   star in the center.      +-----+                                        +-----+      |     |                                        |     |      |     |  --                                 -- |     |      |     |    --                             --   |     |      +-----+      --                         --     +-----+                     --                    ---                       --                --                         --            --                           --        --        ---                  -- A  --                  ---       /   \                ___/ \___                 /   \      |     | ---------------',   .'---------------  |     |       \   /                 /. ^ .\                  \   /        ---                 /'     '\                  ---                           --        --                         --            --                       --                --                     --                    --                   --                        --          /\     --                            --     /\         /  \  --                                --  /  \        /    \                                      /    \       /      \                                    /      \      /--------\                                  /--------\            Figure 1: The "Red Star" in Data/Information Models   While the workshop itself was not a suitable forum to discuss the   design of such translation in detail, several questions were raised:   o  Do we need a "red star" that does everything, or could we design      something that offers a more restricted functionality?   o  How do we handle loss of data and functionality?Jimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   o  Should data be translated between data models, or should data      models themselves be translated?   o  How can interaction models be translated?  They need to be dealt      with in addition to the data models.   o  Many (if not all) data and interaction models have some bizarre      functionality that cannot be translated easily.  How can those be      handled?   o  What limitations are we going to accept in these translations?   The participants also addressed the question of when translation   should be done.  Two use cases were discussed:   (a)  Design time: A translation between data model descriptions, such        as translating a YANG module to a RAML/JSON model, can be        performed once, during design time.  A single information model        might be mapped to a number of different data models.   (b)  Run time: Runtime translation of values in two standard data        models can only be algorithmically done when the data model on        one side is algorithmically derived from the data model on the        other side.  This was called a "derived model".  It was        discussed that the availability of runtime discovery can aid in        semantic translation, such as when a vendor-specific data model        on one side of a protocol bridge is resolved and the translator        can algorithmically derive the semantically equivalent vendor-        specific data model on the other side.  This situation is        discussed in [BridgeTaxonomy].   The participants agreed that algorithm translation will generally   require custom code whenever one is translating to anything other   than a derived model.   Participants concluded that it is typically easier to translate data   between systems that follow the same communication architecture.5.  Dealing with Change   A large part of the workshop was dedicated to the evolution of   devices and server-side applications.  Interactions between devices   and services and how their relationship evolves over time is   complicated by their respective interaction models.   The workshop participants discussed various approaches to deal with   change.  In the most basic case, a developer might use a description   of an API and implement the protocol steps.  Sometimes, the data orJimenez, et al.               Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   information model can be used to generate code stubs.  Subsequent   changes to an API require changes on the clients to upgrade to the   new version, which requires some development of new code to satisfy   the needs of the new API.   These interactions could be made machine understandable in the first   place, enabling for changes to happen at runtime.  In that scenario,   a machine client could discover the possible interactions with a   service, adapting to changes as they occur without specific code   being developed to adapt to them.   The challenge seems to be to code the human-readable specification   into a machine-readable format.  Machine-readable languages require a   shared vocabulary to give meaning to the tags.   These types of interactions are often based on the REST architectural   style.  Its principle is that a device or endpoint only needs a   single entry point, with a host providing descriptions of the API   in-band by means of web links and forms.   By defining IoT-specific relation types, it is possible to drive   interactions through links instead of hard-coding URIs into a RESTful   client, thus making the system flexible enough for later changes.   The definition of the basic hypermedia formats for IoT is still a   work in progress.  However, some of the existing mechanisms can be   reused, such as resource discovery, forms, or links.6.  IANA Considerations   This document has no IANA actions.7.  Security Considerations   There were two types of security considerations discussed: use of   formal data models for security configuration and security of data   and data models in general.   It was observed that the security assumptions and configuration, or   "security model", varies by ecosystem today, making the job of a   translator difficult.  For example, there are different types of   security principals (e.g., user vs. device vs. application), the use   of Access Control Lists (ACLs) versus capabilities, and what types of   policies can be expressed, all vary by ecosystem.  As a result, the   security model architecture generally dictates where translation can   be done.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   One approach discussed was whether two endpoints might be able to use   some overlay security model across a translator between two   ecosystems, which only works if the two endpoints agree on a common   data model for their communication.  Another approach discussed was   simply having a translator act as a trusted intermediary, which   enables the translator to translate between different data models.   One suggestion discussed was either adding metadata into the formal   data model language or having it accompany the data values over the   wire, tagging the data with privacy levels.  However, sometimes even   the privacy level of information might itself be sensitive.  Still,   it was observed that being able to dynamically learn security   requirements might help provide better UIs and translators.8.  Collaboration   The participants discussed how best to share information among their   various organizations.  One discussion was around having joint   meetings.  One current challenge reported was that organizations were   not aware of when and where each other's meetings were scheduled, and   sharing such information could help organizations better collocate   meetings.  To facilitate this exchange, the participants agreed to   add links to their respective meeting schedules from a common page in   the IOTSI repository [IOTSIGIT].   Another challenge reported was that organizations did not know how to   find each other's published data models, and sharing such information   could better facilitate reuse of the same information model.  To   facilitate this exchange, the participants discussed whether a common   repository might be used by multiple organizations.  The OCF's   oneIoTa repository was discussed as one possibility, but it was   reported that its terms of use at the time of the workshop prevented   this.  The OCF agreed to take this back and look at updating the   terms of use to allow other organizations to use it, as the   restriction was not the intent.  <schema.org> was discussed as   another possibility.  In the meantime, the participants agreed to add   links to their respective repositories from a common page in the   IOTSI repository [IOTSIGIT].   It was also agreed that the iotsi@iab.org mailing list would remain   open and available for sharing information between all relevant   organizations.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 20189.  Informative References   [AllJoynExplorer]              Microsoft, "AllJoyn".   [AllSeen]  Thaler, D., "Summary of AllSeen Alliance Work Relevant to              Semantic Interoperability", 2016, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2016/03/AllSeen-summary-IOTSI.pdf>.   [AllSeen-Plugin]              Rockwell, B., "Using the AllJoyn Studio Extension", August              2015.   [BridgeTaxonomy]              Thaler, D., "IoT Bridge Taxonomy", IAB IOTSI              Workshop 2016, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2016/03/DThaler-IOTSI.pdf>.   [HATEOAS]  Kovatsch, M., Hassan, Y., and K. Hartke, "Semantic              Interoperability Requires Self-describing Interaction              Models: HATEOAS for the Internet of Things", Proceedings              of the IAB IoT Semantic Interoperability Workshop 2016,              <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2016/03/2016-IAB-HATEOAS.pdf>.   [IOTSIAG]  IAB, "IoT Semantic Interoperability Workshop Agenda",              2016,              <https://www.iab.org/activities/workshops/iotsi/agenda/>.   [IOTSIGIT]              "Starting place for the IoT Semantic Interoperability              Workshop (IOTSI) Information Resource", commit ff21f74,              July 2018, <https://github.com/iotsi/iotsi>.   [IOTSIWS]  IAB, "IoT Semantic Interoperability Workshop 2016", 2016,              <https://www.iab.org/activities/workshops/iotsi/>.   [LWM2M-Schema]              OMA, "LWM2M XML Schema - LWM2M Editor Schema", July 2018.   [nRF-Sniffer]              Nordic Semiconductor, "nRF Sniffer: Smart/Bluetooth low              energy packet sniffer".   [OMNA]     OMA, "OMA LightweightM2M (LwM2M) Object and Resource              Registry".Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   [OpenDOF]  OpenDOF, "The OpenDOF Project", <https://opendof.org>.   [PYANG]    "An extensible YANG validator and converter in python",              commit 15c807f, September 2018,              <https://github.com/mbj4668/pyang>.   [RFC3444]  Pras, A. and J. Schoenwaelder, "On the Difference between              Information Models and Data Models",RFC 3444,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3444, January 2003,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3444>.   [SIG]      Bluetooth SIG, "GATT Specifications",              <https://www.bluetooth.com/specifications/gatt>.Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018Appendix A.  Program Committee   This workshop was organized by the following individuals: Jari Arkko,   Ralph Droms, Jaime Jimenez, Michael Koster, Dave Thaler, and Hannes   Tschofenig.Appendix B.  Accepted Position Papers   o  Jari Arkko, "Gadgets and Protocols Come and Go, Data Is Forever"   o  Carsten Bormann, "Noise in Specifications hurts"   o  Benoit Claise, "YANG as the Data Modelling Language in the IoT      space"   o  Robert Cragie, "The ZigBee Cluster Library over IP"   o  Dee Denteneer, Michael Verschoor, and Teresa Zotti, "Fairhair:      interoperable IoT services for major Building Automation and      Lighting Control ecosystems"   o  Universal Devices, "Object Oriented Approach to IoT      Interoperability"   o  Bryant Eastham, "Interoperability and the OpenDOF Project"   o  Stephen Farrell and Alissa Cooper, "It's Often True: Security's      Ignored (IOTSI) - and Privacy too"   o  Christian Groves, Lui Yan, and Yang Weiwei, "Overview of IoT      semantics landscape"   o  Ted Hardie, "Loci of Interoperability for the Internet of Things"   o  Russ Housley, "Vehicle-to-Vehicle and Vehicle-to-Infrastructure      Communications"   o  Jaime Jimenez, Michael Koster, and Hannes Tschofenig, "IPSO Smart      Objects"   o  David Jones, "IOTDB - interoperability Through Semantic      Metastandards"   o  Sebastian Kaebisch and Darko Anicic, "Thing Description as Enabler      of Semantic Interoperability on the Web of Things"Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   o  Achilleas Kemos, "Alliance for Internet of Things Innovation      Semantic Interoperability Release 2.0, AIOTI WG03 - IoT      Standardisation"   o  Ari Keraenen and Cullen Jennings, "SenML: simple building block      for IoT semantic interoperability"   o  Dongmyoung Kim, Yunchul Choi, and Yonggeun Hong, "Research on      Unified Data Model and Framework to Support Interoperability      between IoT Applications"   o  Michael Koster, "Model-Based Hypertext Language"   o  Matthias Kovatsch, Yassin N.  Hassan, and Klaus Hartke, "Semantic      Interoperability Requires Self-describing Interaction Models"   o  Kai Kreuzer, "A Pragmatic Approach to Interoperability in the      Internet of Things"   o  Barry Leiba, "Position Paper"   o  Marcello Lioy, "AllJoyn"   o  Kerry Lynn and Laird Dornin, "Modeling RESTful APIs with JSON      Hyper-Schema"   o  Erik Nordmark, "Thoughts on IoT Semantic Interoperability: Scope      of security issues"   o  Open Geospatial Consortium, "OGC SensorThings API: Communicating      "Where" in the Web of Things"   o  Jean Paoli and Taqi Jaffri, "IoT Information Model      Interoperability: An Open, Crowd-Sourced Approach in Three      Parallel Parti"   o  Joaquin Prado, "OMA Lightweight M2M Resource Model"   o  Dave Raggett and Soumya Kanti Datta, "Input paper for IAB Semantic      Interoperability Workshop"   o  Pete Rai and Stephen Tallamy, "Semantic Overlays Over Immutable      Data to Facilitate Time and Context Specific Interoperability"   o  Jasper Roes and Laura Daniele, "Towards semantic interoperability      in the IoT using the Smart Appliances REFerence ontology (SAREF)      and its extensions"Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018   o  Max Senges, "Submission for IAB IoT Sematic Interoperability      workshop"   o  Bill Silverajan, Mert Ocak and Jaime Jimenez, "Implementation      Experiences of Semantic Interoperability for RESTful Gateway      Management"   o  Ned Smith, Jeff Sedayao, and Claire Vishik, "Key Semantic      Interoperability Gaps in the Internet-of-Things Meta-Models"   o  Robert Sparks and Ben Campbell, "Considerations for certain IoT-      based services"   o  J.  Clarke Stevens, "Open Connectivity Foundation oneIoTa Tool"   o  J.  Clarke Stevens and Piper Merriam, "Derived Models for      Interoperability Between IoT Ecosystems"   o  Ravi Subramaniam, "Semantic Interoperability in Open Connectivity      Foundation (OCF) - formerly Open Interconnect Consortium (OIC)"   o  Andrew Sullivan, "Position paper for IOTSI workshop"   o  Darshak Thakore, "IoT Security in the context of Semantic      Interoperability"   o  Dave Thaler, "IoT Bridge Taxonomy"   o  Dave Thaler, "Summary of AllSeen Alliance Work Relevant to      Semantic Interoperability"   o  Mark Underwood, Michael Gruninger, Leo Obrst, Ken Baclawski, Mike      Bennett, Gary Berg-Cross, Torsten Hahmann, and Ram Sriram,      "Internet of Things: Toward Smart Networked Systems and Societies"   o  Peter van der Stok and Andy Bierman, "YANG-Based Constrained      Management Interface (CoMI)"Jimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018Appendix C.  List of Participants      Andy Bierman, YumaWorks      Carsten Bormann, Uni Bremen/TZI      Ben Campbell, Oracle      Benoit Claise, Cisco      Alissa Cooper, Cisco      Robert Cragie, ARM Limited      Laura Daniele, TNO      Bryant Eastham, OpenDOF      Christian Groves, Huawei      Ted Hardie, Google      Yonggeun Hong, ETRI      Russ Housley, Vigil Security      David Janes, IOTDB      Jaime Jimenez, Ericsson      Shailendra Karody, Catalina Labs      Ari Keraenen, Ericsson      Michael Koster, SmartThings      Matthias Kovatsch, Siemens      Kai Kreuzer, Deutsche Telekom      Barry Leiba, Huawei      Steve Liang, Uni Calgary      Marcello Lioy, Qualcomm      Kerry Lynn, Verizon      Mayan Mathen, Catalina Labs      Erik Nordmark, Arista      Jean Paoli, Microsoft      Joaquin Prado, OMA      Dave Raggett, W3C      Max Senges, Google      Ned Smith, Intel      Robert Sparks, Oracle      Ram Sriram, NIST      Clarke Stevens      Ram Subramanian, Intel      Andrew Sullivan, DIN      Darshak Thakore, CableLabs      Dave Thaler, Microsoft      Hannes Tschofenig, ARM Limited      Michael Verschoor, Philips LightingJimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 8477                   IOTSI Workshop 2016              October 2018IAB Members at the Time of Approval      Jari Arkko      Alissa Cooper      Ted Hardie      Christian Huitema      Gabriel Montenegro      Erik Nordmark      Mark Nottingham      Melinda Shore      Robert Sparks      Jeff Tantsura      Martin Thomson      Brian Trammell      Suzanne WoolfAcknowledgements   We would like to thank all paper authors and participants for their   contributions and Ericsson for hosting the workshop.Authors' Addresses   Jaime Jimenez   Email: jaime.jimenez@ericsson.com   Hannes Tschofenig   Email: hannes.tschofenig@arm.com   Dave Thaler   Email: dthaler@microsoft.comJimenez, et al.               Informational                    [Page 18]

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