Network Working Group                                         S. Bradner
Request for Comments: 4775                                       Harvard
BCP: 125                                               B. Carpenter, Ed.
Category: Best Current Practice                                T. Narten
                                                                    IBM
                                                          December 2006


          Procedures for Protocol Extensions and Variations

Status of This Memo

  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the
  Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2006).

Abstract

  This document discusses procedural issues related to the
  extensibility of IETF protocols, including when it is reasonable to
  extend IETF protocols with little or no review, and when extensions
  or variations need to be reviewed by the IETF community.  Experience
  has shown that extension of protocols without early IETF review can
  carry risk.  The document also recommends that major extensions to or
  variations of IETF protocols only take place through normal IETF
  processes or in coordination with the IETF.

  This document is directed principally at other Standards Development
  Organizations (SDOs) and vendors considering requirements for
  extensions to IETF protocols.  It does not modify formal IETF
  processes.
















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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Technical Risks in Extensions ...................................3
  3. General Considerations ..........................................4
     3.1. The Importance of Interoperability .........................4
     3.2. Registered Values and the Importance of IANA Assignments ...5
     3.3. Significant Extensions Require Technical Review ............5
     3.4. Quality and Consistency ....................................6
     3.5. The Role of Formal Liaisons ................................6
  4. Procedure for Review of Extensions ..............................7
  5. Some Specific Issues ...........................................10
  6. Intellectual Property ..........................................10
  7. Security Considerations ........................................10
  8. IANA Considerations ............................................11
  9. Acknowledgements ...............................................11
  10. References ....................................................11
     10.1. Normative References .....................................11
     10.2. Informative References ...................................12

1.  Introduction

  BCP 9 [RFC2026] is the current definition of the IETF standards
  track.  This process applies not only to the initial definition of a
  protocol, but also to any subsequent updates, such that continued
  interoperability can be guaranteed.  However, it is not always clear
  whether extensions to a protocol should be made within the IETF
  process, especially when they originate outside the IETF community.
  This document lays down guidelines and procedures for such
  extensions.

  When developing protocols, IETF Working Groups (WGs) typically
  include mechanisms whereby these protocols can be extended in the
  future.  It is, of course, a good principle to design extensibility
  into protocols; a common definition of a successful protocol is one
  that becomes widely used in ways not originally anticipated.  Well-
  designed extensibility mechanisms facilitate the evolution of
  protocols and help make it easier to roll out incremental changes in
  an interoperable fashion.  At the same time, experience has shown
  that extensibility features should be limited to what is clearly
  necessary when the protocol is developed, and any later extensions
  should be done carefully and with a full understanding of the base
  protocol, existing implementations, and current operational practice.
  However, it is not the purpose of this document to describe the
  architectural principles of sound extensibility design.






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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  When extensions to IETF protocols are made within the IETF, the
  normal IETF process is followed, including the normal processes for
  IETF-wide review and IESG approval.  Extensions developed in this way
  should respect the same architectural principles and technical
  criteria as any other IETF work.

  In addition to the IETF itself, other Standards Development
  Organizations (SDOs), vendors, and technology fora may identify a
  requirement for an extension to an IETF protocol.  The question
  addressed by this document is how such bodies should proceed.  There
  are several possible scenarios:

  1.  The requirement is straightforward and within the scope of
      whatever extension mechanism the base protocol includes.

  2.  The requirement is, or may be, outside that scope, and:
      1.  The IETF still has an active WG in the area;
      2.  The IETF has no active WG, but has relevant expertise;
      3.  The IETF no longer has a nucleus of relevant expertise.

  Especially in the latter three cases, there are technical risks in
  extension design, described in the next section.  These risks are
  higher when extensions to IETF protocols are made outside the IETF
  and without consulting the IETF.

  This document is focused on appropriate procedures and practices to
  minimize the chance that extensions developed outside the IETF will
  encounter these risks and, therefore, become useless or, worse,
  damaging to interoperability.  Architectural considerations are
  documented elsewhere.  This document is directed principally at other
  SDOs and vendors considering requirements for extensions to IETF
  protocols.  It does not modify formal IETF processes.

  The IETF claims no special position.  Everything said here about IETF
  protocols would apply with equal force to protocols specified by any
  SDO.  The IETF should follow whatever procedures another SDO lays
  down for extensions to its own protocols, if the IETF identifies a
  need for such an extension.

2.  Technical Risks in Extensions

  Extensions may be developed without full understanding of why the
  existing protocol was designed the way that it is -- e.g., what ideas
  were brought up during the original development and rejected because
  of some problem with them.  Also, extensions could unintentionally
  negate some key function of the existing protocol (such as security
  or congestion control).  Design choices can be made without analyzing
  their impact on the protocol as a whole, and basic underlying



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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  architectural principles of the protocol can be violated.  Also,
  there is a risk that mutually incompatible extensions may be
  developed independently.

  Of course, the IETF itself is not immune to such mistakes, suggesting
  a need for WGs to document their design decisions (including paths
  rejected) and some rationale for those decisions, for the benefit of
  both those within the IETF and those outside the IETF, perhaps years
  later.

  Documentation of non-IETF extensions can sometimes be hard to obtain,
  so assessing the quality of the specification, verifying
  interoperability, and verifying compatibility with other extensions
  (including past and future extensions) can be hard or impossible.

  A set of interrelated extensions to multiple protocols typically
  carries a greater danger of interoperability issues or
  incompatibilities than a simple extension.  Consequently, it is
  important that such proposals receive earlier and more in-depth
  review than unitary extensions.

  All that can be said about extensions applies with equal or greater
  force to variations -- in fact, by definition, protocol variations
  damage interoperability.  They must, therefore, be intensely
  scrutinized.  An extension adds features and, if well designed,
  allows interoperability between old and new implementations.  A
  variation modifies features in such a way that old and new
  implementations may not interoperate.  Throughout this document, what
  is said about extensions also applies to variations.

3.  General Considerations

3.1.  The Importance of Interoperability

  According to its Mission Statement [RFC3935], the IETF produces high
  quality, relevant technical and engineering documents, including
  protocol standards.  The mission statement goes on to say that the
  benefit of these standards to the Internet "is in interoperability -
  that multiple products implementing a standard are able to work
  together in order to deliver valuable functions to the Internet's
  users".

  One consequence of this mission is that the IETF designs protocols
  for the single Internet.  The IETF expects its protocols to work the
  same everywhere.  Protocol extensions designed for limited
  environments may be reasonable provided that products with these
  extensions interoperate with products without the extensions.
  Extensions that break interoperability are unacceptable when products



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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  with and without the extension are mixed.  It is the IETF's
  experience that this tends to happen on the Internet even when the
  original designers of the extension did not expect this to happen.

  Another consequence of this definition of interoperability is that
  the IETF values the ability to exchange one product implementing a
  protocol with another.  The IETF often specifies mandatory-to-
  implement functionality as part of its protocols so that there is a
  core set of functionality sufficient for interoperability that all
  products implement.  The IETF tries to avoid situations where
  protocols need to be profiled to specify which optional features are
  required for a given environment, because doing so harms
  interoperability on the Internet as a whole.

  The IETF, and in particular the IESG, will apply these considerations
  when evaluating protocol extensions proposed inside or outside the
  IETF.

3.2.  Registered Values and the Importance of IANA Assignments

  An extension is often likely to make use of additional values added
  to an existing IANA registry (in many cases, simply by adding a new
  "TLV" (type-length-value) field).  It is essential that such new
  values are properly registered by the applicable procedures,
  including expert review where applicable (see BCP 26, [RFC2434]).
  Extensions may even need to create new IANA registries in some cases.

  Experience shows that the importance of this is often underestimated
  during extension design; designers sometimes assume that a new
  codepoint is theirs for the asking, or even simply for the taking.
  This is hazardous; it is far too likely that someone just taking a
  protocol value will find that the same value will later be formally
  assigned to another function, thus guaranteeing an interoperability
  problem.

  In many cases, IANA assignment requests trigger a thorough technical
  review of the proposal by a designated IETF expert reviewer.
  Requests are sometimes refused after such a review.  Thus, extension
  designers must pay particular attention to any needed IANA
  assignments and to the applicable criteria.

3.3.  Significant Extensions Require Technical Review

  Some extensions may be considered minor (e.g., adding a
  straightforward new TLV to an application protocol, which will only
  impact a subset of hosts) and some may be considered major (e.g.,
  adding a new IP option type, which will potentially impact every node
  on the Internet).  This is essentially a matter of judgment.  It



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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  could be argued that anything requiring at most Expert Review in
  [RFC2434] is probably minor, and anything beyond that is major.
  However, even an apparently minor extension may have unforeseen
  consequences on interoperability.  Thus, the distinction between
  major and minor is less important than ensuring that the right amount
  of technical review takes place in either case.  In general, the
  expertise for such review lies within the same SDO that developed the
  original protocol.  Therefore, the expertise for such review for IETF
  protocols lies within the IETF.

  There may sometimes be doubt whether a particular proposal is or is
  not truly a protocol extension.  When in doubt, it is preferable to
  err on the side of additional review.  However, it should be noted
  that if an 'extension' only consists of registering a new value with
  IANA in a First Come First Served registry [RFC2434], this document
  is not intended to require formal IETF review.  Informal review by
  experts may, nevertheless, be valuable.  In other cases (Section 5),
  there is a well-specified procedure for extensions that should be
  followed.

  The only safe rule is that, even if an extension appears minor to the
  person proposing it, early review by subject matter experts is
  advisable.  For protocols that have been developed in the IETF, the
  appropriate forum for such review is the IETF, either in the relevant
  WG or Area, or by individual IETF experts if no such WG exists.

3.4.  Quality and Consistency

  In order to be adequately reviewed by relevant experts, a proposed
  extension must be documented in a clear and well-written
  specification that IETF subject matter experts have access to and can
  review.  Ideally, such a document would be published as an Internet
  Draft, using terminology and content that is sufficiently consistent
  with the unextended specification that these experts can readily
  identify the technical changes proposed at an early stage.

3.5.  The Role of Formal Liaisons

  The IETF has formal liaisons in place with a number of SDOs;
  documentation of the liaison process is in [RFC4052], [RFC4053], and
  [RFC4691].  These liaison channels should be used as relevant for
  discussing and reviewing extensions, as should informal communication
  at the engineering level (for example, experts from other SDOs are
  welcome to participate in IETF meetings and mailing lists).  Where
  formal liaison does not exist, the point of contact in the IETF
  should be the Chairs of relevant WGs, the most appropriate Area
  Director, or, in case of doubt, the IESG as a whole.




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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


4.  Procedure for Review of Extensions

  In some cases, explicit provision is made in the relevant RFCs for
  extending individual IETF protocols.  Nothing in this document
  overrides such procedures.  Some such cases are mentioned in
  Section 5.

  There are several ways in which an extension to an IETF protocol can
  be considered for publication as an RFC:

  1.  Extensions to IETF protocols developed within the IETF will be
      subject to the normal IETF process, exactly like new designs.  It
      is not suggested that this is a panacea; appropriate cross-
      working-group and cross-area review is needed within the IETF to
      avoid oversights and mistakes.

  2.  Extensions to IETF protocols discussed in an IRTF Research Group
      may well be the prelude to regular IETF discussion.  However, a
      Research Group may desire to specify an experimental extension
      before the work is mature enough for IETF processing.  In this
      case, the Research Group is required to involve appropriate IETF
      or IANA experts in their process to avoid oversights.

  3.  Extensions to IETF protocols described in Independent Submissions
      to the RFC Editor are subject to IESG review, currently described
      in BCP 92 [RFC3932].  If appropriate, the IESG advises the RFC
      Editor that full IETF processing is needed, or that relevant IANA
      procedures need to be followed before publication can proceed.
      Note that Independent Submissions cannot be placed on the IETF
      Standards Track; they would need to enter full IETF processing.

  Where vendors or other SDOs identify a requirement for extending an
  IETF protocol, their first step should be to consider the scenarios
  listed in Section 1.  If the requirement is straightforward and
  within the scope of a documented extension mechanism, the way is
  clear, and the documented mechanism must be followed.  If these two
  conditions are not met, the next step should be to contact the
  relevant IETF Area Director to check whether there is an active WG in
  the area or, at least, relevant expertise available in the IETF.  At
  this point, it will be possible to select the most appropriate of the
  above three routes.  Regular IETF process is most likely to be
  suitable, assuming sufficient interest can be found in the IETF
  community.  IRTF process is unlikely to be suitable unless there is a
  genuine research context for the proposed extension.







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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  In the event that the IETF no longer has relevant expertise, there
  are still two choices to discuss with the Area Director: bring the
  work to the IETF (i.e., the IETF imports expertise) or reach mutual
  agreement to do the work elsewhere (i.e., the IETF explicitly exports
  change control).

  In the case of an SDO that identifies a requirement for a
  standardized extension, a standards development process within the
  IETF (while maintaining appropriate liaison) is strongly recommended
  in preference to publishing a non-IETF standard.  Otherwise, the
  implementor community will be faced with a standard split into two or
  more parts in different styles, obtained from different sources, with
  no unitary control over quality, compatibility, interoperability, and
  intellectual property conditions.  Note that, since participation in
  the IETF is open, there is no formality or restriction for
  participants in other SDOs choosing to work in the IETF as well.  In
  some cases (see Section 5), the IETF has well-defined procedures for
  this in place.

  Naturally, SDOs can and do develop scenarios, requirements, and
  architectures based on IETF specifications.  It is only actual
  protocol extensions and changes that need to go through the IETF
  process.  However, there is large risk of wasted effort if
  significant investment is made in planning stages for use of IETF
  technology without early review and feedback from the IETF.  Other
  SDOs are encouraged to communicate informally or formally with the
  IETF as early as possible, to avoid false starts.  Early technical
  review in a collaborative spirit is of great value.  Each SDO can
  "own" its ideas and discuss them in its own fora, but should start
  talking to the IETF experts about those ideas the moment the idea is
  well formulated.  It is understood that close collaboration may be
  needed in order that the IETF experts correctly understand the
  systems architecture envisaged by the other SDO.  This is much
  preferable to a situation where another SDO presents the IANA and the
  IETF with a 'fait accompli.'

  Vendors that identify a requirement for an extension are strongly
  recommended to start informal discussion in the IETF and to publish a
  preliminary Internet Draft describing the requirements.  This will
  allow the vendor, and the community, to evaluate whether there is
  community interest and whether there are any major or fundamental
  issues.  However, in the case of a vendor that identifies a
  requirement for a proprietary extension that does not generate
  interest in the IETF (or IRTF) communities, an Independent Submission
  to the RFC Editor is strongly recommended in preference to publishing
  a proprietary document.  Not only does this bring the draft to the





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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  attention of the community, but it also ensures a minimum of review
  [RFC3932], and (if published as an RFC) makes the proprietary
  extension available to the whole community.

  If, despite these recommendations, a vendor or SDO does choose to
  publish its own specification for an extension to an IETF protocol,
  the following guidance applies:

  o  Extensions to IETF protocols should be well, and publicly,
     documented, and reviewed at an early stage by the IETF community
     to be sure that the extension does not undermine basic assumptions
     and safeguards designed into the protocol (such as security
     functions) or its architectural integrity.

  o  Vendors and other SDOs are formally requested to submit any such
     proposed publications for IETF review, and are invited to actively
     participate in the IETF process.  Submission may be by an
     established liaison channel if it exists, or by direct
     communication with the relevant WG or the IESG.  This should be
     done at an early stage, before a large investment of effort has
     taken place, in case basic problems are revealed.  When there is a
     formal liaison in place between the other SDO and the IETF, the
     liaison channel should be used to ensure that review takes place,
     both by relevant experts and by established review teams or
     Directorates within the IETF.  If there is no formal liaison, the
     other SDO or vendor should ask the IESG (or a relevant Area
     Director) to obtain such reviews.  Note that general aspects such
     as security, internationalization, and management may need review,
     as well as the protocol as such.

  o  In the case of extensions involving only routine IANA parameter
     assignments, for which there is an underlying IETF specification
     containing clear IANA Considerations, this request is satisfied as
     long as those considerations are satisfied (see [RFC2434]).
     Anything beyond this requires an explicit protocol review by
     experts within the IETF.

  o  Note that, like IETF specifications, such proposed publications
     must include an IANA Considerations section to ensure that
     protocol parameter assignments that are needed to deploy
     extensions are not made until after a proposed extension has
     received adequate review, and then to ensure that IANA has precise
     guidance on how to make those assignments.








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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


5.  Some Specific Issues

  It is relatively common for MIB modules, which are all, in effect,
  extensions of the SMI data model, to be defined or extended outside
  the IETF.  BCP 111 [RFC4181] offers detailed guidance for authors and
  reviewers.

  A number of protocols have foreseen experimental values for certain
  IANA parameters, so that experimental usages and extensions may be
  tested without need for a special parameter assignment.  It must be
  stressed that such values are not intended for production use or as a
  way to evade the type of technical review described in this document.
  See [RFC3692] and [RFC4727].

  RADIUS [RFC2865] is designed to carry attributes and allow definition
  of new attributes.  But it is important that discussion of new
  attributes involve the IETF community of experts knowledgeable about
  the protocol's architecture and existing usage in order to fully
  understand the implications of a proposed extension.  Adding new
  attributes without such discussion creates a high risk of
  interoperability or functionality failure.  For this reason among
  others, the IETF has an active RADIUS Extensions WG at the time of
  writing.

  There are certain documents that specify a change process for
  specific IETF protocols, such as:
     The SIP change process [RFC3427]
     The (G)MPLS change process [CHANGEPROC]

  This document does not override such specific change processes.

6.  Intellectual Property

  All IETF documents fall under the IETF's intellectual property rules,
  BCP 78 [RFC3978] and BCP 79 [RFC3979], as amended.  In particular,
  there are restrictions on the production of derivative works, and
  there are rights that remain with the original authors.  Anybody
  outside the IETF considering an extension based on an IETF document
  must bear these legal restrictions and rights in mind.

7.  Security Considerations

  An extension must not introduce new security risks without also
  providing an adequate counter-measure, and in particular it must not
  inadvertently defeat security measures in the unextended protocol.
  This aspect must always be considered during IETF review.





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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


8.  IANA Considerations

  The IETF requests IANA to pay attention to the requirements of this
  document when requested to make protocol parameter assignments for
  vendors or other SDOs, i.e., to respect the IANA Considerations of
  all RFCs that contain them, and the general considerations of BCP 26
  [RFC2434].

9.  Acknowledgements

  This document is heavily based on an earlier draft under a different
  title by Scott Bradner and Thomas Narten.

  That earlier draft stated: The initial version of this document was
  put together by the IESG in 2002.  Since then, it has been reworked
  in response to feedback from John Loughney, Henrik Levkowetz, Mark
  Townsley, Randy Bush, Bernard Aboba, and others.

  Ted Hardie, Scott Brim, Dan Romascanu, Jari Arkko, Loa Andersson,
  Adrian Farrel, Roy Fielding, Keith Moore, Bernard Aboba, Elwyn
  Davies, Stephen Trowbridge, and Ted Ts'o also made valuable comments
  on this document.

  Sam Hartman contributed the section on interoperability.

  This document was produced using the xml2rfc tool [RFC2629].

10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2026]    Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
               3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.

  [RFC2434]    Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
               IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434,
               October 1998.

  [RFC3427]    Mankin, A., Bradner, S., Mahy, R., Willis, D., Ott, J.,
               and B. Rosen, "Change Process for the Session Initiation
               Protocol (SIP)", BCP 67, RFC 3427, December 2002.

  [RFC3692]    Narten, T., "Assigning Experimental and Testing Numbers
               Considered Useful", BCP 82, RFC 3692, January 2004.

  [RFC3932]    Alvestrand, H., "The IESG and RFC Editor Documents:
               Procedures", BCP 92, RFC 3932, October 2004.




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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


  [RFC3935]    Alvestrand, H., "A Mission Statement for the IETF",
               BCP 95, RFC 3935, October 2004.

  [RFC3978]    Bradner, S., "IETF Rights in Contributions", BCP 78,
               RFC 3978, March 2005.

  [RFC3979]    Bradner, S., "Intellectual Property Rights in IETF
               Technology", BCP 79, RFC 3979, March 2005.

  [RFC4052]    Daigle, L. and Internet Architecture Board, "IAB
               Processes for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships",
               BCP 102, RFC 4052, April 2005.

  [RFC4053]    Trowbridge, S., Bradner, S., and F.  Baker, "Procedures
               for Handling Liaison Statements to and from the IETF",
               BCP 103, RFC 4053, April 2005.

  [RFC4181]    Heard, C., "Guidelines for Authors and Reviewers of MIB
               Documents", BCP 111, RFC 4181, September 2005.

  [RFC4727]    Fenner, B., "Experimental Values In IPv4, IPv6, ICMPv4,
               ICMPv6, UDP, and TCP Headers", RFC 4727, November 2006.

10.2.  Informative References

  [CHANGEPROC] Andersson, L. and A. Farrel, "Change Process for
               Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and Generalized
               MPLS  (GMPLS) Protocols and Procedures", Work in
               Progress, October 2006.

  [RFC2629]    Rose, M., "Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML", RFC 2629,
               June 1999.

  [RFC2865]    Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
               "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
               RFC 2865, June 2000.

  [RFC4691]    Andersson, L., "Guidelines for Acting as an IETF Liaison
               to Another Organization", RFC 4691, October 2006.












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RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


Authors' Addresses

  Scott Bradner
  Harvard University
  29 Oxford St.
  Cambridge, MA  02138
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Brian Carpenter, Ed.
  IBM
  8 Chemin de Blandonnet
  1214 Vernier
  Switzerland

  EMail: [email protected]


  Thomas Narten
  IBM
  3039 Cornwallis Ave.
  PO Box 12195 - BRQA/502
  Research Triangle Park, NC  27709-2195
  US

  EMail: [email protected]























Bradner, et al.          Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 4775           Procedures for Protocol Extensions      December 2006


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2006).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
  retain all their rights.

  This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
  OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST,
  AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES,
  EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT
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  IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
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Intellectual Property

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Acknowledgement

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