Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        P. Kewisch
Request for Comments: 7095                                       Mozilla
Category: Standards Track                                   January 2014
ISSN: 2070-1721


                   jCard: The JSON Format for vCard

Abstract

  This specification defines "jCard", a JSON format for vCard data.
  The vCard data format is a text format for representing and
  exchanging information about individuals and other entities, for
  example, telephone numbers, email addresses, structured names, and
  delivery addresses.  JSON is a lightweight, text-based, language-
  independent data interchange format commonly used in Internet
  applications.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7095.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.





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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
  2.  Conventions Used in This Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
  3.  Converting from vCard to jCard  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
    3.1.  Pre-processing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
    3.2.  jCard Object and Syntactic Entities (RFC 6350, Sections
          6.1.1 and 6.1.2)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
    3.3.  Properties (RFC 6350, Section 6)  . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
      3.3.1.  Special Cases for Properties  . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
        3.3.1.1.  The VERSION Property  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
        3.3.1.2.  Grouping of Properties  . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
        3.3.1.3.  Structured Property Values  . . . . . . . . . . .   8
    3.4.  Parameters (RFC 6350, Section 5)  . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
      3.4.1.  VALUE Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
      3.4.2.  Multi-Valued Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
    3.5.  Values (RFC 6350, Section 4)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
      3.5.1.  Text (RFC 6350, Section 4.1)  . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
      3.5.2.  URI (RFC 6350, Section 4.2) . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
      3.5.3.  Date (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.1)  . . . . . . . . . . .  12
      3.5.4.  Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.2)  . . . . . . . . . . .  13
      3.5.5.  Date-Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.3) . . . . . . . . .  14
      3.5.6.  Date and/or Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.4)  . . . . .  16
      3.5.7.  Timestamp (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.5) . . . . . . . . .  16
      3.5.8.  Boolean (RFC 6350, Section 4.4) . . . . . . . . . . .  17
      3.5.9.  Integer (RFC 6350, Section 4.5) . . . . . . . . . . .  17
      3.5.10. Float (RFC 6350, Section 4.6) . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
      3.5.11. UTC Offset (RFC 6350, Section 4.7)  . . . . . . . . .  18
      3.5.12. Language Tag (RFC 6350, Section 4.8)  . . . . . . . .  18
    3.6.  Extensions (RFC 6350, Section 6.10) . . . . . . . . . . .  18
  4.  Converting from jCard into vCard  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
  5.  Handling Unrecognized Properties or Parameters  . . . . . . .  19
    5.1.  Converting vCard into jCard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
    5.2.  Converting jCard into vCard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
    5.3.  Examples  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
  6.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
  7.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
    7.1.  GROUP vCard Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
    7.2.  UNKNOWN vCard Value Data Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
  8.  Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
  9.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
    9.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
    9.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
  Appendix A.  ABNF Syntax  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
  Appendix B.  Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27
    B.1.  Example: vCard of the Author of RFC 6350  . . . . . . . .  27
      B.1.1.  vCard Data  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27
      B.1.2.  jCard Data  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28



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1.  Introduction

  The vCard data format [RFC6350] provides for the capture and exchange
  of information normally stored within an address book or directory
  application.  The vCard format has gone through multiple revisions,
  most recently vCard 4.

  As certain similarities exist between vCard and the iCalendar data
  format [RFC5545], there is also an effort to define a JSON-based data
  format for calendar information called jCal [JCAL] that parallels the
  format defined in this specification.  The term "JSON" describes the
  JavaScript Object Notation defined in [RFC4627].

  The purpose of this specification is to define "jCard", a JSON format
  for vCard data.  One main advantage to using a JSON-based format over
  the classic vCard format is easier processing for JavaScript-based
  widgets and libraries, especially in the scope of web-based
  applications.

  The key design considerations are essentially the same as those for
  [JCAL] and [RFC6321], that is:

     Round-tripping (converting a vCard instance to jCard and back)
     will give the same semantic result as the starting point.  For
     example, all components, properties, and property parameters are
     guaranteed to be preserved.

     The Ordering of elements and the case of property and parameter
     names will not necessarily be preserved.

     The vCard data semantics are to be preserved, allowing a simple
     consumer to easily browse the data in jCard.  A full understanding
     of vCard is still required in order to modify and/or fully
     comprehend the directory data.

     Extensions to the underlying vCard specification must not lead to
     requiring an update to jCard.

2.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].

  The underlying format used for jCard is JSON.  Consequently, the
  terms "object" and "array" as well as the four primitive types
  (strings, numbers, booleans, and null) are to be interpreted as
  described in Section 1 of [RFC4627].



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  Some examples in this document contain "partial" JSON documents used
  for illustrative purposes.  In these examples, three periods "..."
  are used to indicate a portion of the document that has been removed
  for compactness.

3.  Converting from vCard to jCard

  This section describes how vCard objects are converted to jCard using
  a simple mapping between the vCard data model and JSON elements.

  In [RFC6350], vCard objects are comprised of a set of "properties",
  "parameters", and "values".  The top level of a vCard object contains
  "properties".  A "property" has a "value" and a set of zero or more
  "parameters".  Each of these entities has a representation in jCard,
  defined in the following sections.  The representation of a vCard
  object in JSON will be named "jCard object" throughout this document.

3.1.  Pre-processing

  vCard uses a line-folding mechanism to limit lines of data to a
  maximum line length (typically 75 octets) to ensure maximum
  likelihood of preserving data integrity as it is transported via
  various means (e.g., email) -- see Section 3.2 of [RFC6350].

  vCard data uses an "escape" character sequence for text values and
  property parameter values.  See Section 3.4 of [RFC6350] as well as
  [RFC6868].

  When converting from vCard to jCard, first vCard lines MUST be
  unfolded.  Afterwards, any vCard escaping MUST be unescaped.
  Finally, JSON escaping (e.g., for control characters) MUST be
  applied.

  The reverse order applies when converting from jCard to vCard.
  First, JSON escaping MUST be unescaped.  Afterwards, vCard escaping
  MUST be applied.  Finally, long lines SHOULD be folded as described
  in [RFC6350].

  One key difference in the formatting of values used in vCard and
  jCard is that in jCard the specification uses date/time values
  aligned with the extended format of [ISO.8601.2004], which is more
  commonly used in Internet applications that make use of the JSON
  format.  The sections of this document describing the various date
  and time formats contain more information on the use of the complete
  representation, reduced accuracy, or truncated representation.






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3.2.  jCard Object and Syntactic Entities (RFC 6350, Sections 6.1.1 and
     6.1.2)

  In Sections 6.1.1 and 6.1.2 of [RFC6350], the BEGIN and END
  properties delimit a syntactic vCard entity.  In jCard, each
  syntactic entity is represented by an array with two elements and is
  named "jCard object".  The first element is the string "vcard", and
  the second element is an array of jCard properties as described in
  Section 3.3, belonging to the entity.

  Although [RFC6350] defines BEGIN and END to be properties, they MUST
  NOT appear as properties of the jCard.  Instead, the jCard object is
  sufficient to define a vCard entity.  When converting from jCard to
  vCard, the BEGIN and END properties MUST be added to enclose the
  properties of the jCard object.

  Example:

  ["vcard", [
    /* Add properties in place of this comment */
    ]
  ]

  Consumers of this format wishing to define content that can represent
  multiple jCard objects within the same JSON document can use a simple
  JSON array, each element being a single jCard object.

3.3.  Properties (RFC 6350, Section 6)

  Each individual vCard property is represented in jCard by an array
  with three fixed elements, followed by one or more additional
  elements, depending on if the property is a multi-valued property as
  described in Section 3.3 of [RFC6350].

  The array consists of the following fixed elements:

  1.  The name of the property, as a lowercase string.  The vCard
      format specifies that property names are case insensitive and
      recommends that they be rendered in uppercase.  In jCard, they
      MUST be in lowercase.

  2.  An object containing the parameters as described in Section 3.4.
      If the property has no parameters, an empty object is used to
      represent that.







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  3.  The type identifier string of the value, in lowercase.  It is
      important that parsers check this to determine the data type of
      the value and that they do not rely on assumptions.  For example,
      for structured values, the data type will be "array".

  The remaining elements of the array are used for one or more values
  of the property.  For single-value properties, the array has exactly
  four elements; for multi-valued properties, each value is another
  element, and there can be any number of additional elements.

  In the following example, the "categories" property is multi-valued
  and has two values, while all other properties are single-valued:

  ["vcard",
    [
      ["version", {}, "text", "4.0"],
      ["fn", {}, "text", "John Doe"],
      ["gender", {}, "text", "M"],
      ["categories", {}, "text", "computers", "cameras"],
      ...
    ]
  ]

  As described in Section 3.3.1.3, a property value may be a structured
  property value, in which case it is represented as an array
  encapsulated in the array that represents the overall property.

  Strictly speaking, this means that the property value is not
  represented in the format indicated by the type identifier but by an
  array instead.  However, the values inside the encapsulated array are
  of the format identified by the type identifier.

  The above also holds for multi-valued properties, where some of the
  values may be structured property values and therefore are
  represented as an encapsulated array.

  A special case is where a value in an encapsulated array consists of
  multiple components itself, in which case it is represented as yet
  another nested array, with elements matching the value type.
  Section 3.3.1.3 describes this in more detail.

  The above illustrates that it's important for the parser to check the
  format of each property value, as it might either directly match the
  value type, or it might be a structured value where nested
  subelements match the value type.






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3.3.1.  Special Cases for Properties

  This section describes some properties that have special handling
  when converting to jCard.

3.3.1.1.  The VERSION Property

  The vCard format specification [RFC6350] defines the "VERSION"
  property to be mandatory.  The jCard "version" property MUST be
  represented in the corresponding jCard component, with the same value
  as in the vCard. vCards that conform to RFC 6350 will contain the
  value "4.0".

  Also in accordance to [RFC6350], the "version" property MUST be the
  first element of the array containing the properties of a jCard.

3.3.1.2.  Grouping of Properties

  In vCard [RFC6350], related properties can be grouped together using
  a grouping construct.  The grouping is accomplished by adding a
  prefix (which consists of the group name followed by a dot) to the
  property name.

  In jCard, the same grouping is achieved through a "group" parameter
  that holds the group name.  In jCard, a property name therefore MUST
  NOT be prefixed by a group name.

  The "GROUP" parameter MUST NOT be used in vCard; as per [RFC6350], it
  is merely registered to reserve the parameter, avoiding collisions.
  Formal registration of the "GROUP" parameter is described in
  Section 7.1.

3.3.1.2.1.  Group Conversion Rules

  In jCard, the parameter's value is a single opaque string.
  Conversion rules are as follows:

  o  From vCard to jCard, the group construct (see [RFC6350],
     Section 3.3) is removed.  In its place, the "group" parameter is
     used.  Its value is a string corresponding to the group name,
     which is case insensitive both in vCard and jCard.  The name's
     case SHOULD be converted into lowercase.

  o  When converting from jCard to vCard, the value of the "group"
     parameter followed by a dot is prefixed to the property name, and
     the "group" parameter is discarded.  The "GROUP" parameter MUST
     NOT appear in the resulting vCard.  Following the recommendations
     in [RFC6350], the name's case SHOULD be converted into uppercase.



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  Example:

  CONTACT.FN:Mr. John Q. Public\, Esq.

  is equivalent to:

  [ "fn", { "group": "CONTACT" }, "text", "Mr. John Q. Public, Esq." ]

3.3.1.3.  Structured Property Values

  The vCard specification defines properties with structured values,
  for example, "GENDER" or "ADR".  In vCard, a structured text value
  consists of one or multiple text components, delimited by the
  SEMICOLON character.  Its equivalent in jCard is a structured
  property value, which is an array containing one element for each
  text component, with empty/missing text components represented by
  zero-length strings.

  vCard Example:

  ADR:;;123 Main Street;Any Town;CA;91921-1234;U.S.A.

  jCard Example:

  ["adr", {}, "text",
    [
    "", "", "123 Main Street",
    "Any Town", "CA", "91921-1234", "U.S.A."
    ]
  ]

  Some vCard properties, for example, ADR, also allow a structured
  value element that itself has multiple values.  In this case, the
  element of the array describing the structured value is itself an
  array with one element for each of the component's multiple values.

  vCard Example:

  ADR:;;My Street,Left Side,Second Shack;Hometown;PA;18252;U.S.A.












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  jCard Example:

  ["adr", {}, "text",
    [
    "", "",
    ["My Street", "Left Side", "Second Shack"],
    "Hometown", "PA", "18252", "U.S.A."
    ]
  ]

  In both cases, the array element values MUST have the primitive type
  that matches the jCard type identifier.  In [RFC6350], there are only
  structured text values and thus only JSON strings are used.  For
  example, extensions may define structured number or boolean values,
  where JSON number or boolean types MUST be used.

  Although it is allowed for a structured property value to hold just
  one component, it is RECOMMENDED to represent it as a single text
  value instead, omitting the array completely.  Nevertheless, a simple
  implementation MAY choose to retain the array, with a single text
  value as its element.

  Similarly, structured values that consist of two text components with
  one being optional (for example, "GENDER") can be represented as a
  single text value.  Therefore, parsers of jCard data SHOULD check
  even known property values for structured information by considering
  the JSON data type of the value, which can be an array or a primitive
  value.  This is especially important for languages where accessing
  array members is done by the same construct as accessing characters
  of a string.

  Examples:

  ["gender", {}, "text", ["F", "grrrl"] ],
  ["gender", {}, "text", "M" ]

  Per Section 6.3.1 of [RFC6350], the component separator MUST be
  specified even if the component value is missing.  Similarly, the
  jCard array containing the structured data MUST contain all required
  elements, even if they are empty.

  vCard Example:

  ADR;LABEL="123 Maple Ave\nSuite 901\nVancouver BC\nA1B 2C9\nCan
   ada":;;;;;;






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  jCard Example:

  ["adr",
   {"label":"123 Maple Ave\nSuite 901\nVancouver BC\nA1B 2C9\nCanada"},
   "text",
   ["", "", "", "", "", "", ""]
  ]

3.4.  Parameters (RFC 6350, Section 5)

  Property parameters are represented as a JSON object where each key-
  value pair represents the vCard parameter name and its value.  The
  name of the parameter MUST be in lowercase; the original case of the
  parameter value MUST be preserved.  For example, the "LANGUAGE"
  property parameter is represented in jCard by the "language" key.
  Any new vCard parameters added in the future will be converted in the
  same way.

  Example:

  ["role", { "language": "tr" }, "text", "roca"],

3.4.1.  VALUE Parameter

  vCard defines a "VALUE" property parameter (Section 5.2 of
  [RFC6350]).  This property parameter MUST NOT be added to the
  parameters object.  Instead, the value type is signaled through the
  type identifier in the third element of the array describing the
  property.  When converting a property from vCard to jCard, the value
  type is determined as follows:

  1.  If the property has a "VALUE" parameter, that parameter's value
      is used as the value type.

  2.  If the property has no "VALUE" parameter but has a default value
      type, the default value type is used.

  3.  If the property has no "VALUE" parameter and has no default value
      type, "unknown" is used.

  Converting from jCard into vCard is done as follows:

  1.  If the property's value type is "unknown", no "VALUE" parameter
      is included.

  2.  If the property's value type is the default type for that
      property, no "VALUE" parameter is included.




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  3.  Otherwise, a "VALUE" parameter is included, and the value type is
      used as the parameter value.

  See Section 5 for information on handling unknown value types.

3.4.2.  Multi-Valued Parameters

  In [RFC6350], some parameters allow using a comma-separated list of
  values.  To ease processing in jCard, the value for such parameters
  MUST be represented in an array containing the separated values.  The
  array elements MUST be string values.  Single-value parameters SHOULD
  be represented using a single string value, although a more simple
  implementation might prefer an array with one string element.  An
  example of such a parameter is the vCard "SORT-AS" parameter; more
  such parameters may be added in extensions.

  The vCard specification requires encapsulation between DQUOTE
  characters if a parameter value contains a colon, a semicolon, or a
  comma.  These extra DQUOTE characters do not belong to the actual
  parameter value and hence are not included when the parameter is
  converted to jCard.

  Example:

  ["vcard",
    [
      ["version", {}, "text", "4.0"],
      ["n",
       { "sort-as": ["Harten", "Rene"] },
       "text",
       ["van der Harten", "Rene", "J.", "Sir", "R.D.O.N."]
      ],
      ["fn", {}, "text", "Rene van der Harten"]
      ...
    ]
  ]

3.5.  Values (RFC 6350, Section 4)

  The following subsections specify how vCard property value data types
  (which are defined in Section 4 of [RFC6350]) are represented in
  jCard.









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3.5.1.  Text (RFC 6350, Section 4.1)

  Description:  vCard "TEXT" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "text".  The value elements are
     JSON strings.  For details on structured text values, see
     Section 3.3.1.3.

  Example:

  ["kind", {}, "text", "group"]

3.5.2.  URI (RFC 6350, Section 4.2)

  Description:  vCard "URI" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "uri".  The value elements are
     JSON strings.

  Example:

  ["source", {}, "uri", "ldap://ldap.example.com/cn=babs%20jensen"]

3.5.3.  Date (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.1)

  Description:  vCard "DATE" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "date".  The value elements are
     JSON strings with the same date value specified by [RFC6350], but
     represented using the extended format specified in
     [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.1.2.  If the complete representation is
     not used, the same date format restrictions regarding reduced
     accuracy, truncated representation, and expanded representation
     noted in [RFC6350], Section 4.3.1 apply.  Whenever the extended
     format is not applicable, the basic format MUST be used.

  ABNF syntax:

  date-complete = year "-" month "-" day ;YYYY-MM-DD

  date-noreduc = date-complete
             / "--" month "-" day ; --MM-DD
             / "---" day          ; ---DDD

  date = date-noreduc
     / year; YYYY
     / year "-" month ; YYYY-MM
     / "--" month     ; --MM






Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  Examples:

  ["bday", {}, "date", "1985-04-12"],
  ["bday", {}, "date", "1985-04"],
  ["bday", {}, "date", "1985"],
  ["bday", {}, "date", "--04-12"],
  ["bday", {}, "date", "---12"]

  This table contains possible conversions between the vCard DATE
  format and jCard date.  This information is just an example and not a
  formal specification of the syntax.  The specification can be found
  in [ISO.8601.2000] and [ISO.8601.2004].

                  +-----------+----------+------------+
                  |           | vCard    | jCard      |
                  +-----------+----------+------------+
                  | Complete  | 19850412 | 1985-04-12 |
                  |           |          |            |
                  | Reduced   | 1985-04  | 1985-04    |
                  |           |          |            |
                  | Reduced   | 1985     | 1985       |
                  |           |          |            |
                  | Truncated | --0412   | --04-12    |
                  |           |          |            |
                  | Truncated | --04     | --04       |
                  |           |          |            |
                  | Truncated | ---12    | ---12      |
                  +-----------+----------+------------+

3.5.4.  Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.2)

  Description:  vCard "TIME" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "time".  The value elements are
     JSON strings with the same time value specified by [RFC6350], but
     represented using the extended format specified in
     [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.2.  If the complete representation is
     not used, the same time format restrictions regarding reduced
     accuracy, decimal fraction, and truncated representation noted in
     [RFC6350], Section 4.3.2 apply.  Whenever the extended format is
     not applicable, the basic format MUST be used.  The seconds value
     of 60 MUST only be used to account for positive "leap" seconds,
     and the midnight hour is always represented by 00, never 24.
     Fractions of a second are not supported by this format.  In jCard,
     UTC offsets are permitted within a time value; note that this
     differs from jCal [JCAL], where they are not permitted.






Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  ABNF syntax:

  time-notrunc =  hour [":" minute [":" second]] [zone]

  time = time-notrunc
     / "-" minute ":" second [zone]; -mm:ss
     / "-" minute [zone]; -mm
     / "--" second [zone]; --ss

  Examples:

  ["x-time-local", {}, "time", "12:30:00"],
  ["x-time-utc", {}, "time", "12:30:00Z"],
  ["x-time-offset", {}, "time", "12:30:00-08:00"],
  ["x-time-reduced", {}, "time", "23"],
  ["x-time-truncated", {}, "time", "-30"]

  This table contains possible conversions between the vCard TIME
  format and jCard time.  This information is just an example and not a
  formal specification of the syntax.  The specification can be found
  in [ISO.8601.2000] and [ISO.8601.2004].

                    +-----------+--------+----------+
                    |           | vCard  | jCard    |
                    +-----------+--------+----------+
                    | Complete  | 232050 | 23:20:50 |
                    |           |        |          |
                    | Reduced   | 2320   | 23:20    |
                    |           |        |          |
                    | Reduced   | 23     | 23       |
                    |           |        |          |
                    | Truncated | -2050  | -20:50   |
                    |           |        |          |
                    | Truncated | -20    | -20      |
                    |           |        |          |
                    | Truncated | --50   | --50     |
                    +-----------+--------+----------+

  Also, all combinations may have any zone designator appended, as in
  the complete representation.

3.5.5.  Date-Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.3)

  Description:  vCard "DATE-TIME" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "date-time".  The value elements
     are JSON strings with the same date value specified by [RFC6350],
     but represented using the extended format specified in
     [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.3.  If the complete representation is



Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


     not used, the same date and time format restrictions noted in
     Sections 3.5.3 and 3.5.4 apply.  Just as described in [RFC6350],
     truncation of the date part is permitted.

  Example:

  ["anniversary", {}, "date-time", "2013-02-14T12:30:00"],
  ["anniversary", {}, "date-time", "2013-01-10T19:00:00Z"],
  ["anniversary", {}, "date-time", "2013-08-15T09:45:00+01:00"],
  ["anniversary", {}, "date-time", "---15T09:45:00+01:00"]

  This table contains possible conversions between the vCard DATE-TIME
  format and jCard date-time.  This information is just an example and
  not a formal specification of the syntax.  The specification can be
  found in [ISO.8601.2000] and [ISO.8601.2004].

  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+
  | Representation | vCard                | jCard                     |
  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050      | 1985-04-12T23:20:50       |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050Z     | 1985-04-12T23:20:50Z      |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050+0400 | 1985-04-12T23:20:50+04:00 |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050+04   | 1985-04-12T23:20:50+04    |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Reduced        | 19850412T2320        | 1985-04-12T23:20          |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Reduced        | 19850412T23          | 1985-04-12T23             |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Truncated and  | --0412T2320          | --04-12T23:20             |
  | Reduced        |                      |                           |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Truncated and  | --04T2320            | --04T23:20                |
  | Reduced        |                      |                           |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Truncated and  | ---12T2320           | ---12T23:20               |
  | Reduced        |                      |                           |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Truncated and  | --0412T2320          | --04-12T23:20             |
  | Reduced        |                      |                           |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Truncated and  | --04T23              | --04T23                   |
  | Reduced        |                      |                           |
  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+





Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  As specified in [ISO.8601.2000], the lower-order components may not
  be omitted in the date part (reduced accuracy) and the higher-order
  components may not be omitted in the time part (truncation).  Also,
  all combinations may have any zone designator appended, as in the
  complete representation.

3.5.6.  Date and/or Time (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.4)

  Description:  vCard "DATE-AND-OR-TIME" property values are
     represented by a property with the type identifier "date-and-or-
     time".  The value elements are either a date-time (Section 3.5.5),
     a date (Section 3.5.3), or a time (Section 3.5.4) value.  Just as
     described in Section 4.3.4 of [RFC6350], a stand-alone time value
     MUST always be preceded by a "T".

  Example:

  ["bday", {}, "date-and-or-time", "2013-02-14T12:30:00"],
  ["bday", {}, "date-and-or-time", "---22T14:00"]
  ["bday", {}, "date-and-or-time", "1985"],
  ["bday", {}, "date-and-or-time", "T12:30"]

3.5.7.  Timestamp (RFC 6350, Section 4.3.5)

  Description:  vCard "TIMESTAMP" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "timestamp".  The value elements
     are JSON strings with the same timestamp value specified by
     [RFC6350], but represented using the extended format and complete
     representation specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.3.2.

  Example:

  ["rev", {}, "timestamp", "2013-02-14T12:30:00"],
  ["rev", {}, "timestamp", "2013-02-14T12:30:00Z"],
  ["rev", {}, "timestamp", "2013-02-14T12:30:00-05"],
  ["rev", {}, "timestamp", "2013-02-14T12:30:00-05:00"]

  This table contains possible conversions between the vCard TIMESTAMP
  format and jCard timestamp.  This information is just an example and
  not a formal specification of the syntax.  The specification can be
  found in [ISO.8601.2000] and [ISO.8601.2004].










Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+
  | Representation | vCard                | jCard                     |
  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050      | 1985-04-12T23:20:50       |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050Z     | 1985-04-12T23:20:50Z      |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050+0400 | 1985-04-12T23:20:50+04:00 |
  |                |                      |                           |
  | Complete       | 19850412T232050+04   | 1985-04-12T23:20:50+04    |
  +----------------+----------------------+---------------------------+

3.5.8.  Boolean (RFC 6350, Section 4.4)

  Description:  vCard "BOOLEAN" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "boolean".  The value element is
     a JSON boolean value.

  Example:

  ["x-non-smoking", {}, "boolean", true]

3.5.9.  Integer (RFC 6350, Section 4.5)

  Description:  vCard "INTEGER" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "integer".  The value elements
     are JSON primitive number values.

  Examples:

  ["x-karma-points", {}, "integer", 42]

  JSON allows decimals (e.g., 3.14) and exponents (e.g., 2e10) to be
  used in numeric values.  jCard does not prohibit this for "integer"
  property values.  However, since vCard does not support decimals or
  exponents in integers, any decimals and exponents MUST be eliminated
  when converting an "integer" value type property from jCard to vCard.

3.5.10.  Float (RFC 6350, Section 4.6)

  Description:  vCard "FLOAT" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "float".  The value elements are
     JSON primitive number values.

  Example:

  ["x-grade", {}, "float", 1.3]




Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  JSON allows exponents (e.g., 2e10) to be used in numeric values.
  jCard does not prohibit this for "float" property values.  However,
  since vCard does not support exponents in floats, any exponents MUST
  be eliminated when converting a "float" value type property from
  jCard to vCard.

3.5.11.  UTC Offset (RFC 6350, Section 4.7)

  Description:  vCard "UTC-OFFSET" property values are represented by a
     property with the type identifier "utc-offset".  The value
     elements are JSON strings with the same UTC offset value specified
     by [RFC6350], with the exception that the hour and minute
     components are separated by a ":" character, for consistency with
     the [ISO.8601.2004] timezone offset, extended format.

  Example:

  // Note: [RFC6350] mentions use of utc-offset
  // for the TZ property as NOT RECOMMENDED
  ["tz", {}, "utc-offset", "-05:00"]

3.5.12.  Language Tag (RFC 6350, Section 4.8)

  Description:  vCard "LANGUAGE-TAG" property values are represented by
     a property with the type identifier "language-tag".  The value
     elements are JSON strings containing a single language-tag, as
     defined in [RFC5646].

  Example:

  ["lang", {}, "language-tag", "de"]

3.6.  Extensions (RFC 6350, Section 6.10)

  vCard extension properties and property parameters (those with an
  "X-" prefix in their name) are handled in the same way as other
  properties and property parameters: the property is represented by an
  array, the property parameter represented by an object.  The property
  or parameter name uses the same name as for the vCard extension, but
  in lowercase.  For example, the "X-FOO" property in vCard turns into
  the "x-foo" jCard property.  See Section 5 for how to deal with
  default values for unrecognized extension properties or property
  parameters.








Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


4.  Converting from jCard into vCard

  When converting property and property parameter values, the names
  SHOULD be converted to uppercase.  Although vCard names are case
  insensitive, common practice is to keep them all uppercase following
  the actual definitions in [RFC6350].

  Character escaping and line folding MUST be applied to the resulting
  vCard data as required by [RFC6350] and [RFC6868].

  When converting to vCard, the "VALUE" parameter MUST be added to
  properties whose default value type is unknown but do not have a
  jCard type identifier "unknown".  The "VALUE" parameter MAY be
  omitted for properties using the default value type.  The "VALUE"
  parameter MUST be omitted for properties that have the jCard type
  identifier "unknown".

5.  Handling Unrecognized Properties or Parameters

  In vCard, properties can have one or more value types as specified by
  their definition, with one of those values being defined as the
  default.  When a property uses its default value type, the "VALUE"
  property parameter does not need to be specified on the property.
  For example, "BDAY"'s default value type is "date-and-or-time", so
  "VALUE=date-and-or-time" need not be set as a property parameter.
  However, "BDAY" also allows a "text" value to be specified, and if
  that is used, "VALUE=text" has to be set as a property parameter.

  When new properties are defined or "X-" properties used, a vCard-to-
  jCard converter might not recognize them, and not know what the
  appropriate default value types are, yet it needs to be able to
  preserve the values.  A similar issue arises for unrecognized
  property parameters.

  In jCard, a new "unknown" property value type is introduced.  Its
  purpose is to allow preserving unknown property values when round-
  tripping between jCard and vCard.  To avoid collisions, this
  specification reserves the "UNKNOWN" property value type in vCard.
  It MUST NOT be used in any vCard as specified by [RFC6350], nor any
  extensions to it.  The type is hence registered to the "vCard Value
  Data Types" registry; see Section 7.2.

5.1.  Converting vCard into jCard

  Any property that does not include a "VALUE" property parameter and
  whose default value type is not known MUST be converted to a
  primitive JSON string.  The content of that string is the unprocessed
  value text.  Also, value type MUST be set to "unknown".



Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  To correctly implement this format, it's critical to use the value
  type "unknown" when the default value type is not known.  If this
  requirement is ignored and, for example, "text" is used, additional
  escaping may occur that breaks round-tripping values.

  Any unrecognized property parameter MUST be converted to a string
  value, with its content set to the property parameter value text,
  treated as if it were a "TEXT" value.

5.2.  Converting jCard into vCard

  In jCard, the value type is always explicitly specified.  It is
  converted to vCard using the vCard "VALUE" parameter, except in the
  following two cases:

  o  If the value type specified in jCard matches the default value
     type in vCard, the "VALUE" parameter MAY be omitted.

  o  If the value type specified in jCard is set to "unknown", the
     "VALUE" parameter MUST NOT be specified.  The value MUST be taken
     over in vCard without processing.

5.3.  Examples

  The following is an example of an unrecognized vCard property (that
  uses a "URI" value as its default), and the equivalent jCard
  representation of that property.

  vCard:

  X-COMPLAINT-URI:mailto:[email protected]

  jCard:

  ["x-complaint-uri", {}, "unknown", "mailto:[email protected]"]

  The following is an example of how to cope with jCard data where the
  parser was unable to identify the value type.  Note how the "unknown"
  value type is not added to the vCard data, and escaping, aside from
  standard JSON string escaping, is not processed.

  jCard:

  ["x-coffee-data", {}, "unknown", "Stenophylla;Guinea\\,Africa"]

  vCard:

  X-COFFEE-DATA:Stenophylla;Guinea\,Africa



Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  There are no standard properties in [RFC6350] that have a default
  type of integer.  Consequently, this example uses the following
  extended property that we treat as having a default type (namely,
  integer) known to the parser in order to illustrate how a property
  with a known default type would be transformed.

  jCard:

  ["x-karma-points", {}, "integer", 95]

  vCard:

  X-KARMA-POINTS:95

  The following is an example of an unrecognized vCard property
  parameter (that uses a "FLOAT" value as its default) specified on a
  recognized vCard property, and the equivalent jCard representation of
  that property and property parameter.

  vCard:

  GENDER;X-PROBABILITY=0.8:M

  jCard:

  ["gender", { "x-probability": "0.8" }, "text", "M"]

6.  Security Considerations

  This specification defines how vCard data can be "translated" between
  two different data formats -- the original text format and JSON --
  with a one-to-one mapping to ensure all the semantic data in one
  format (properties, parameters, and values) are preserved in the
  other.  It does not change the semantic meaning of the underlying
  data itself, or impose or remove any security considerations that
  apply to the underlying data.

  The use of JSON as a format does have its own inherent security risks
  as discussed in Section 7 of [RFC4627].  Even though JSON is
  considered a safe subset of JavaScript, it should be kept in mind
  that a flaw in the parser for JSON data could still impose a threat
  that doesn't arise with conventional vCard data.

  With this in mind when using jCard, the parser for JSON data should
  be aware of the security implications.  For example, the use of
  JavaScript's eval() function is only allowed using the regular
  expression in Section 6 of [RFC4627].  A native parser with full
  awareness of the JSON format should be preferred.



Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  In addition, it is expected that this new format will result in vCard
  data being more widely disseminated (e.g., with use in web
  applications rather than just dedicated "contact managers").

  In all cases, application developers have to conform to the semantics
  of the vCard data as defined by [RFC6350] and associated extensions,
  and all of the security considerations described in Section 9 of
  [RFC6350], or any associated extensions, are applicable.

7.  IANA Considerations

  This document defines a MIME media type for use with vCard in JSON
  data.  This media type SHOULD be used for the transfer of calendaring
  data in JSON.

  Type name:  application

  Subtype name:  vcard+json

  Required parameters:  none

  Optional parameters:  "version", as defined for the text/vcard media
     type in [RFC6350], Section 10.1.

  Encoding considerations:  Same as encoding considerations of
     application/json as specified in [RFC4627], Section 6.

  Security considerations:  See Section 6.

  Interoperability considerations:  This media type provides an
     alternative format for vCard data based on JSON.

  Published specification:  This specification.

  Applications which use this media type:  Applications that currently
     make use of the text/vcard media type can use this as an
     alternative.  Similarly, applications that use the application/
     json media type to transfer directory data can use this to further
     specify the content.

  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A










Kewisch                      Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 7095                          jCard                     January 2014


  Additional information:

     Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A

     Magic number(s):  N/A

     File extension(s):  N/A

     Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

  Person & email address to contact for further information:
     [email protected]

  Intended usage:  COMMON

  Restrictions on usage:  There are no restrictions on where this media
     type can be used.

  Author:  See the "Author's Address" section of this document.

  Change controller:  IETF

7.1.  GROUP vCard Parameter

  IANA has added the "GROUP" parameter to the "vCard Parameters"
  registry, initialized in Section 10.3.2 of [RFC6350].  Usage of the
  "GROUP" parameter is further described in Section 3.3.1.2 of this
  document.

  Namespace:  <empty>

  Parameter name:  GROUP

  Purpose:  To simplify the jCard format.

  Description:  The "GROUP" parameter is reserved for the exclusive use
     of the jCard format described in this document.  It MUST NOT be
     used in plain vCard [RFC6350], nor in xCard [RFC6351].

  Format definition:  When converting from jCard to vCard, the value of
     the "GROUP" parameter is used as part of the property name.
     Therefore, the value is restricted to characters allowed in
     property names, namely ALPHA, DIGIT, and "-" characters.  When
     used, the "GROUP" parameter MUST NOT be empty.







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  Example:  As this registration serves as a reservation of the "GROUP"
     parameter so that it is not used in vCard, there is no applicable
     vCard example.  Examples of its usage in jCard can be found in
     this document.

7.2.  UNKNOWN vCard Value Data Type

  IANA has added the "UNKNOWN" value data type to the "vCard Value Data
  Types" registry, initialized in Section 10.3.3 of [RFC6350].  Usage
  of the "UNKNOWN" type is further described in Section 5 of this
  document.

  Value name:  UNKNOWN

  Purpose:  To allow preserving property values whose default value
     type is not known during round-tripping between jCard and vCard.

  Format definition:  (Not applicable)

  Description:  The "UNKNOWN" value data type is reserved for the
     exclusive use of the jCard format.  It MUST NOT be used in plain
     vCard [RFC6350].

  Example:  As this registration serves as a reservation of the
     "UNKNOWN" type so that it is not used in vCard, there is no
     applicable vCard example.  Examples of its usage in jCard can be
     found in this document.

8.  Acknowledgments

  The author would like to thank the following for their valuable
  contributions: Cyrus Daboo, Mike Douglass, William Gill, Erwin Rehme,
  Dave Thewlis, Simon Perreault, Michael Angstadt, Peter Saint-Andre,
  Bert Greevenbosch, and Javier Godoy.  This specification originated
  from the work of the XML-JSON technical committee of the Calendaring
  and Scheduling Consortium.

9.  References

9.1.  Normative References

  [ISO.8601.2000]
             International Organization for Standardization, "Data
             elements and interchange formats -- Information
             interchange -- Representation of dates and times", ISO
             8601, December 2000.





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  [ISO.8601.2004]
             International Organization for Standardization, "Data
             elements and interchange formats -- Information
             interchange -- Representation of dates and times", ISO
             8601, December 2004.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC4627]  Crockford, D., "The application/json Media Type for
             JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)", RFC 4627, July 2006.

  [RFC5234]  Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
             Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.

  [RFC5646]  Phillips, A. and M. Davis, "Tags for Identifying
             Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646, September 2009.

  [RFC6350]  Perreault, S., "vCard Format Specification", RFC 6350,
             August 2011.

  [RFC6868]  Daboo, C., "Parameter Value Encoding in iCalendar and
             vCard", RFC 6868, February 2013.

9.2.  Informative References

  [JCAL]     Kewisch, P., Daboo, C., and M. Douglass, "jCal: The JSON
             format for iCalendar", Work in Progress, December 2013.

  [RFC5545]  Desruisseaux, B., "Internet Calendaring and Scheduling
             Core Object Specification (iCalendar)", RFC 5545,
             September 2009.

  [RFC6321]  Daboo, C., Douglass, M., and S. Lees, "xCal: The XML
             Format for iCalendar", RFC 6321, August 2011.

  [RFC6351]  Perreault, S., "xCard: vCard XML Representation", RFC
             6351, August 2011.

  [calconnect-artifacts]
             The Calendaring and Scheduling Consortium, "Code Artifacts
             and Schemas", <http://www.calconnect.org/artifacts.shtml>.









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Appendix A.  ABNF Syntax

  Below is the ABNF syntax as per [RFC5234] for vCard in JSON.  ABNF
  symbols not described here are taken from [RFC4627].  The syntax is
  non-normative and given for reference only.

  The numeric section numbers given in the comments refer to sections
  in [RFC6350].  Additional semantic restrictions apply, especially
  regarding the allowed properties and subcomponents per component.
  Details on these restrictions can be found in this document and
  [RFC6350].

  Additional ABNF syntax may be available on the Internet at
  [calconnect-artifacts].

  ; A jCard object uses the name "vcard" and a properties array.
  ; Restrictions to which properties may be specified are to
  ; be taken from RFC 6350.
  jcardobject = begin-array
                DQUOTE component-name DQUOTE value-separator
                properties-array
                end-array

  ; A jCard property consists of the name string, parameters object,
  ; type string, and one or more values as specified in this document.
  property = begin-array
             DQUOTE property-name DQUOTE value-separator
             params-object value-separator
             DQUOTE type-name DQUOTE
             property-value *(value-separator property-value)
             end-array
  properties-array = begin-array
                     [ property *(value-separator property) ]
                     end-array

  ; Property values depend on the type-name. Aside from the value types
  ; mentioned here, extensions may make use of other JSON value types.
  property-value = simple-prop-value / structured-prop-value
  simple-prop-value = string / number / true / false
  structured-prop-value =
      begin-array
      [ structured-element *(value-separator structured-element) ]
      end-array

  ; Each structured element may have multiple values if
  ; semantically allowed.
  structured-element = simple-prop-value / structured-multi-prop




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  structured-multi-prop =
      begin-array
      [ simple-prop-value *(value-separator simple-prop-value) ]
      end-array

  ; The jCard params-object is a JSON object that follows the semantic
  ; guidelines described in this document.
  params-object = begin-object
                  [ params-member *(value-separator params-member) ]
                  end-object
  params-member = DQUOTE param-name DQUOTE name-separator param-value
  param-value = string / param-multi
  param-multi = begin-array
                [ string *(value-separator string) ]
                end-array

  ; The type MUST be a valid type as described by this document. New
  ; value types can be added by extensions.
  type-name = "text" / "uri" / "date" / "time" / "date-time" /
              "boolean" / "integer" / "float" / "utc-offset" /
              "language-tag" / x-type

  ; Property, parameter, and type names MUST be lowercase. Additional
  ; semantic restrictions apply as described by this document and
  ; RFC 6350.
  component-name = lowercase-name
  property-name = lowercase-name
  param-name = lowercase-name
  x-type = lowercase-name
  lowercase-name = 1*(%x61-7A / DIGIT / "-")

Appendix B.  Examples

  This section contains an example of a vCard object with its jCard
  representation.

B.1.  Example: vCard of the Author of RFC 6350

B.1.1.  vCard Data

  BEGIN:VCARD
  VERSION:4.0
  FN:Simon Perreault
  N:Perreault;Simon;;;ing. jr,M.Sc.
  BDAY:--0203
  ANNIVERSARY:20090808T1430-0500
  GENDER:M
  LANG;PREF=1:fr



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  LANG;PREF=2:en
  ORG;TYPE=work:Viagenie
  ADR;TYPE=work:;Suite D2-630;2875 Laurier;
   Quebec;QC;G1V 2M2;Canada
  TEL;VALUE=uri;TYPE="work,voice";PREF=1:tel:+1-418-656-9254;ext=102
  TEL;VALUE=uri;TYPE="work,cell,voice,video,text":tel:+1-418-262-6501
  EMAIL;TYPE=work:[email protected]
  GEO;TYPE=work:geo:46.772673,-71.282945
  KEY;TYPE=work;VALUE=uri:
   http://www.viagenie.ca/simon.perreault/simon.asc
  TZ:-0500
  URL;TYPE=home:http://nomis80.org
  END:VCARD

B.1.2.  jCard Data

  ["vcard",
    [
      ["version", {}, "text", "4.0"],
      ["fn", {}, "text", "Simon Perreault"],
      ["n",
        {},
        "text",
        ["Perreault", "Simon", "", "", ["ing. jr", "M.Sc."]]
      ],
      ["bday", {}, "date-and-or-time", "--02-03"],
      ["anniversary",
        {},
        "date-and-or-time",
        "2009-08-08T14:30:00-05:00"
      ],
      ["gender", {}, "text", "M"],
      ["lang", { "pref": "1" }, "language-tag", "fr"],
      ["lang", { "pref": "2" }, "language-tag", "en"],
      ["org", { "type": "work" }, "text", "Viagenie"],
      ["adr",
         { "type": "work" },
         "text",
         [
          "",
          "Suite D2-630",
          "2875 Laurier",
          "Quebec",
          "QC",
          "G1V 2M2",
          "Canada"
         ]
      ],



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      ["tel",
        { "type": ["work", "voice"], "pref": "1" },
        "uri",
        "tel:+1-418-656-9254;ext=102"
      ],
      ["tel",
        { "type": ["work", "cell", "voice", "video", "text"] },
        "uri",
        "tel:+1-418-262-6501"
      ],
      ["email",
        { "type": "work" },
        "text",
        "[email protected]"
      ],
      ["geo", { "type": "work" }, "uri", "geo:46.772673,-71.282945"],
      ["key",
        { "type": "work" },
        "uri",
        "http://www.viagenie.ca/simon.perreault/simon.asc"
      ],
      ["tz", {}, "utc-offset", "-05:00"],
      ["url", { "type": "home" }, "uri", "http://nomis80.org"]
    ]
  ]

Author's Address

  Philipp Kewisch
  Mozilla Corporation
  650 Castro Street, Suite 300
  Mountain View, CA  94041
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.mozilla.org/















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