Network Working Group                                            M. Day
Request for Comments: 2779                                        Lotus
Category: Informational                                     S. Aggarwal
                                                             Microsoft
                                                               G. Mohr
                                                             Activerse
                                                            J. Vincent
                                                         Into Networks
                                                         February 2000


          Instant Messaging / Presence Protocol Requirements

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  Presence and Instant Messaging have recently emerged as a new medium
  of communications over the Internet.  Presence is a means for
  finding, retrieving, and subscribing to changes in the presence
  information (e.g. "online" or "offline") of other users. Instant
  messaging is a means for sending small, simple messages that are
  delivered immediately to online users.

  Applications of presence and instant messaging currently use
  independent, non-standard and non-interoperable protocols developed
  by various vendors.  The goal of the Instant Messaging and Presence
  Protocol (IMPP) Working Group is to define a standard protocol so
  that independently developed applications of instant messaging and/or
  presence can interoperate across the Internet. This document defines
  a minimal set of requirements that IMPP must meet.












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Table of Contents

  1. Terminology...................................................  3
  2. Shared Requirements...........................................  4
   2.1. Namespace and Administration...............................  5
   2.2. Scalability................................................  5
   2.3. Access Control.............................................  6
   2.4. Network Topology...........................................  6
   2.5. Message Encryption and Authentication......................  7
  3. Additional Requirements for PRESENCE INFORMATION..............  7
   3.1. Common Presence Format.....................................  7
   3.2. Presence Lookup and Notification...........................  8
   3.3. Presence Caching and Replication...........................  8
   3.4. Performance................................................  9
  4. Additional Requirements for INSTANT MESSAGES..................  9
   4.1. Common Message Format......................................  9
   4.2. Reliability................................................ 10
   4.3. Performance................................................ 10
   4.4. Presence Format............................................ 10
  5. Security Considerations....................................... 11
   5.1. Requirements related to SUBSCRIPTIONS...................... 11
   5.2. Requirements related to NOTIFICATION....................... 12
   5.3. Requirements related to receiving a NOTIFICATION........... 13
   5.4. Requirements related to INSTANT MESSAGES................... 13
  6. References.................................................... 14
  7. Authors' Addresses............................................ 15
  8. Appendix: Security Expectations and Deriving Requirements..... 16
   8.1. Presence Information....................................... 16
    8.1.1. Subscription............................................ 16
    8.1.2. Publication............................................. 19
    8.1.3. Publication for Notification............................ 19
    8.1.4. Receiving a Notification................................ 20
   8.2. Instant Messaging.......................................... 21
    8.2.1. Named Instant Messaging................................. 21
    8.2.2. Anonymous Instant Messaging............................. 23
    8.2.3. Administrator Expectations.............................. 24
  Full Copyright Statement......................................... 26














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1. Terminology

  The following terms are defined in [RFC 2778] and are used with those
  definitions in this document:

  ACCESS RULES
  CLOSED
  FETCHER
  INSTANT INBOX
  INSTANT MESSAGE
  NOTIFICATION
  OPEN
  POLLER
  PRESENCE INFORMATION
  PRESENCE SERVICE
  PRESENTITY
  PRINCIPAL
  PROXY
  SERVER
  STATUS
  SUBSCRIBER
  SUBSCRIPTION
  WATCHER

  The terms MUST and SHOULD are used in the following sense while
  specifying requirements:

  MUST: A proposed solution will have to meet this requirement.
  SHOULD: A proposed solution may choose not to meet this requirement.

  Note that this usage of MUST and SHOULD differs from that of RFC
  2119.

  Additionally, the following terms are used in this document and
  defined here:

  ADMINISTRATOR: A PRINCIPAL with authority over local computer and
  network resources, who manages local DOMAINS or FIREWALLS. For
  security and other purposes, an ADMINISTRATOR often needs or wants to
  impose restrictions on network usage based on traffic type, content,
  volume, or endpoints. A PRINCIPAL's ADMINISTRATOR has authority over
  some or all of that PRINCIPAL's computer and network resources.

  DOMAIN: A portion of a NAMESPACE.

  ENTITY: Any of PRESENTITY, SUBSCRIBER, FETCHER, POLLER, or WATCHER
  (all defined in [RFC 2778]).




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  FIREWALL: A point of administrative control over connectivity.
  Depending on the policies being enforced, parties may need to take
  unusual measures to establish communications through the FIREWALL.

  IDENTIFIER: A means of indicating a point of contact, intended for
  public use such as on a business card. Telephone numbers, email
  addresses, and typical home page URLs are all examples of IDENTIFIERS
  in other systems.  Numeric IP addresses like 10.0.0.26 are not, and
  neither are URLs containing numerous CGI parameters or long arbitrary
  identifiers.

  INTENDED RECIPIENT: The PRINCIPAL to whom the sender of an INSTANT
  MESSAGE is sending it.

  NAMESPACE: The system that maps from a name of an ENTITY to the
  concrete implementation of that ENTITY. A NAMESPACE may be composed
  of a number of distinct DOMAINS.

  OUT OF CONTACT: A situation in which some ENTITY and the PRESENCE
  SERVICE cannot communicate.

  SUCCESSFUL DELIVERY: A situation in which an INSTANT MESSAGE was
  transmitted to an INSTANT INBOX for the INTENDED RECIPIENT, and the
  INSTANT INBOX acknowledged its receipt. SUCCESSFUL DELIVERY usually
  also implies that an INBOX USER AGENT has handled the message in a
  way chosen by the PRINCIPAL. However, SUCCESSFUL DELIVERY does not
  imply that the message was actually seen by that PRINCIPAL.

2. Shared Requirements

  This section describes non-security requirements that are common to
  both an PRESENCE SERVICE and an INSTANT MESSAGE SERVICE.  Section 6
  describes requirements specific to a PRESENCE SERVICE, while Section
  7 describes requirements specific to an INSTANT MESSAGE SERVICE.
  Section 8 describes security considerations. The reader should note
  that Section 11 is an appendix that provides historical context and
  aids in tracing the origins of requirements in Section 8. Section 11
  is not, however, a statement of current IMPP requirements.

  It is expected that Presence and Instant Messaging services will be
  particularly valuable to users over mobile IP wireless access
  devices.  Indeed the number of devices connected to the Internet via
  wireless means is expected to grow substantially in the coming years.
  It is not reasonable to assume that separate protocols will be
  available for the wireless portions of the Internet. In addition, we
  note that wireless infrastructure is maturing rapidly; the work
  undertaken by this group should take into account the expected state
  of the maturity of the technology in the time-frame in which the



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  Presence and Instant Messaging protocols are expected to be deployed.

  To this end, the protocols designed by this Working Group must be
  suitable for operation in a context typically associated with mobile
  wireless access devices, viz.  high latency, low bandwidth and
  possibly intermittent connectivity (which lead to a desire to
  minimize round-trip delays), modest computing power, battery
  constraints, small displays, etc. In particular, the protocols must
  be designed to be reasonably efficient for small payloads.

2.1. Namespace and Administration

  2.1.1. The protocols MUST allow a PRESENCE SERVICE to be available
  independent of whether an INSTANT MESSAGE SERVICE is available, and
  vice-versa.

  2.1.2. The protocols must not assume that an INSTANT INBOX is
  necessarily reached by the same IDENTIFIER as that of a PRESENTITY.
  Specifically, the protocols must assume that some INSTANT INBOXes may
  have no associated PRESENTITIES, and vice versa.

  2.1.3. The protocols MUST also allow an INSTANT INBOX to be reached
  via the same IDENTIFIER as the IDENTIFIER of some PRESENTITY.

  2.1.4. The administration and naming of ENTITIES within a given
  DOMAIN MUST be able to operate independently of actions in any other
  DOMAIN.

  2.1.5. The protocol MUST allow for an arbitrary number of DOMAINS
  within the NAMESPACE.

2.2. Scalability

  2.2.1. It MUST be possible for ENTITIES in one DOMAIN to interoperate
  with ENTITIES in another DOMAIN, without the DOMAINS having
  previously been aware of each other.

  The protocol MUST be capable of meeting  its other functional and
  performance requirements even when

     -- (2.2.2) there are millions of ENTITIES within a single DOMAIN.

     -- (2.2.3) there are millions of DOMAINS within the single
        NAMESPACE.







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     -- (2.2.4) every single SUBSCRIBER has SUBSCRIPTIONS to hundreds
        of PRESENTITIES.

     -- (2.2.5) hundreds of distinct SUBSCRIBERS have SUBSCRIPTIONS to
        a single PRESENTITY.

     -- (2.2.6) every single SUBSCRIBER has SUBSCRIPTIONS to
        PRESENTITIES in hundreds of distinct DOMAINS.

  These are protocol design goals; implementations may choose to place
  lower limits.

2.3. Access Control

  The PRINCIPAL controlling a PRESENTITY MUST be able to control

     -- (2.3.1) which WATCHERS can observe that PRESENTITY's PRESENCE
        INFORMATION.

     -- (2.3.2) which WATCHERS can have SUBSCRIPTIONS to that
        PRESENTITY's PRESENCE INFORMATION.

     -- (2.3.3) what PRESENCE INFORMATION a particular WATCHER will see
        for that PRESENTITY, regardless of whether the WATCHER gets it
        by fetching or NOTIFICATION.

     -- (2.3.4) which other PRINCIPALS, if any, can update the PRESENCE
        INFORMATION of that PRESENTITY.

  The PRINCIPAL controlling an INSTANT INBOX MUST be able to control

     -- (2.3.5) which other PRINCIPALS, if any, can send INSTANT
        MESSAGES to that INSTANT INBOX.

     -- (2.3.6) which other PRINCIPALS, if any, can read INSTANT
        MESSAGES from that INSTANT INBOX.

  2.3.7. Access control MUST be independent of presence: the PRESENCE
  SERVICE MUST be able to make access control decisions even when the
  PRESENTITY is OUT OF CONTACT.

2.4. Network Topology

  Note that intermediaries such as PROXIES may be necessitated between
  IP and non-IP networks, and by an end-user's desire to provide
  anonymity and hide their IP address.





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  2.4.1. The protocol MUST allow the creation of a SUBSCRIPTION both
  directly and via intermediaries, such as PROXIES.

  2.4.2. The protocol MUST allow the sending of a NOTIFICATION both
  directly and via intermediaries, such as PROXIES.

  2.4.3. The protocol MUST allow the sending of an INSTANT MESSAGE both
  directly and via intermediaries, such as PROXIES.

  2.4.4. The protocol proxying facilities and transport practices MUST
  allow ADMINISTRATORS ways to enable and disable protocol activity
  through existing and commonly-deployed FIREWALLS.  The protocol MUST
  specify how it can be effectively filtered by such FIREWALLS.

2.5. Message Encryption and Authentication

  2.5.1. The protocol MUST provide means to ensure confidence that a
  received message (NOTIFICATION or INSTANT MESSAGE) has not been
  corrupted or tampered with.

  2.5.2. The protocol MUST provide means to ensure confidence that a
  received message (NOTIFICATION or INSTANT MESSAGE) has not been
  recorded and played back by an adversary.

  2.5.3. The protocol MUST provide means to ensure that a sent message
  (NOTIFICATION or INSTANT MESSAGE) is only readable by ENTITIES that
  the sender allows.

  2.5.4. The protocol MUST allow any client to use the means to ensure
  non-corruption, non-playback, and privacy, but the protocol MUST NOT
  require that all clients use these means at all times.

3. Additional Requirements for PRESENCE INFORMATION

  The requirements in section 6 are applicable only to PRESENCE
  INFORMATION and not to INSTANT MESSAGES.  Additional constraints on
  PRESENCE INFORMATION in a system supporting INSTANT MESSAGES appear
  in Section 7.4.

3.1. Common Presence Format

  3.1.1. All ENTITIES MUST produce and consume at least a common base
  format for PRESENCE INFORMATION.

  3.1.2. The common presence format MUST include a means to uniquely
  identify the PRESENTITY whose PRESENCE INFORMATION is reported.





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  3.1.3. The common presence format MUST include a means to encapsulate
  contact information for the PRESENTITY's PRINCIPAL (if applicable),
  such as email address, telephone number, postal address, or the like.

  3.1.4. There MUST be a means of extending the common presence format
  to represent additional information not included in the common
  format, without undermining or rendering invalid the fields of the
  common format.

  3.1.5. The working group must define the extension and registration
  mechanisms for presence information schema, including new STATUS
  conditions and new forms for OTHER PRESENCE MARKUP.

  3.1.6. The presence format SHOULD be based on IETF standards such as
  vCard [RFC 2426] if possible.

3.2. Presence Lookup and Notification

  3.2.1. A FETCHER MUST be able to fetch a PRESENTITY's PRESENCE
  INFORMATION even when the PRESENTITY is OUT OF CONTACT.

  3.2.2. A SUBSCRIBER MUST be able to request a SUBSCRIPTION to a
  PRESENTITY's PRESENCE INFORMATION, even when the PRESENTITY is OUT OF
  CONTACT.

  3.2.3. If the PRESENCE SERVICE has SUBSCRIPTIONS for a PRESENTITY's
  PRESENCE INFORMATION, and that PRESENCE INFORMATION changes, the
  PRESENCE SERVICE MUST deliver a NOTIFICATION to each SUBSCRIBER,
  unless prevented by the PRESENTITY's ACCESS RULES.

  3.2.4. The protocol MUST provide a mechanism for detecting when a
  PRESENTITY or SUBSCRIBER has gone OUT OF CONTACT.

  3.2.5. The protocol MUST NOT depend on a PRESENTITY or SUBSCRIBER
  gracefully telling the service that it will no longer be in
  communication, since a PRESENTITY or SUBSCRIBER may go OUT OF CONTACT
  due to unanticipated failures.

3.3. Presence Caching and Replication

  3.3.1. The protocol MUST include mechanisms to allow PRESENCE
  INFORMATION to be cached.

  3.3.2. The protocol MUST include mechanisms to allow cached PRESENCE
  INFORMATION to be updated when the master copy changes.






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  3.3.3 The protocol caching facilities MUST NOT circumvent established
  ACCESS RULES or restrict choice of authentication/encryption
  mechanisms.

3.4 Performance

  3.4.1 When a PRESENTITY changes its PRESENCE INFORMATION, any
  SUBSCRIBER to that information MUST be notified of the changed
  information rapidly, except when such notification is entirely
  prevented by ACCESS RULES. This requirement is met if each
  SUBSCRIBER's NOTIFICATION is transported as rapidly as an INSTANT
  MESSAGE would be transported to an INSTANT INBOX.

4. Additional Requirements for INSTANT MESSAGES

  The requirements in section 4 are applicable only to INSTANT MESSAGES
  and not to PRESENCE INFORMATION, with the exception of Section 4.4.
  Section 4.4 describes constraints on PRESENCE INFORMATION that are
  relevant only to systems that support both INSTANT MESSAGES and
  PRESENCE INFORMATION.

4.1. Common Message Format

  4.1.1. All ENTITIES sending and receiving INSTANT MESSAGES MUST
  implement at least a common base format for INSTANT MESSAGES.

  4.1.2. The common base format for an INSTANT MESSAGE MUST identify
  the sender and intended recipient.

  4.1.3. The common message format MUST include a return address for
  the receiver to reply to the sender with another INSTANT MESSAGE.

  4.1.4. The common message format SHOULD include standard forms of
  addresses or contact means for media other than INSTANT MESSAGES,
  such as telephone numbers or email addresses.

  4.1.5. The common message format MUST permit the encoding and
  identification of the message payload to allow for non-ASCII or
  encrypted content.

  4.1.6. The protocol must reflect best current practices related to
  internationalization.

  4.1.7. The protocol must reflect best current practices related to
  accessibility.






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  4.1.8. The working group MUST define the extension and registration
  mechanisms for the message format, including new fields and new
  schemes for INSTANT INBOX ADDRESSES.

  4.1.9. The working group MUST determine whether the common message
  format includes fields for numbering or identifying messages. If
  there are such fields, the working group MUST define the scope within
  which such identifiers are unique and the acceptable means of
  generating such identifiers.

  4.1.10. The common message format SHOULD be based on IETF-standard
  MIME [RFC 2045].

4.2. Reliability

  4.2.1. The protocol MUST include mechanisms so that a sender can be
  informed of the SUCCESSFUL DELIVERY of an INSTANT MESSAGE or reasons
  for failure.  The working group must determine what mechanisms apply
  when final delivery status is unknown, such as when a message is
  relayed to non-IMPP systems.

4.3 Performance

  4.3.1. The transport of INSTANT MESSAGES MUST be sufficiently rapid
  to allow for comfortable conversational exchanges of short messages.

4.4 Presence Format

  4.4.1. The common presence format MUST define a minimum standard
  presence schema suitable for INSTANT MESSAGE SERVICES.

  4.4.2. When used in a system supporting INSTANT MESSAGES, the common
  presence format MUST include a means to represent the STATUS
  conditions OPEN and CLOSED.

  4.4.3. The STATUS conditions OPEN and CLOSED may also be applied to
  messaging or communication modes other than INSTANT MESSAGE SERVICES.














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5. Security Considerations

  Security considerations are addressed in section 2.3, Access Control,
  and section 2.5, Message authentication and encryption.

  This section describes further security-related requirements that the
  protocol must meet.

  The security requirements were derived from a set of all-encompassing
  "security expectations" that were then evaluated for practicality and
  implementability and translated into requirements.  In the appendix,
  we describe the expectations and the process used to transform them
  into requirements. In this section, we simply list the consolidated
  set of derived requirements.

  Note that in the requirements, ADMINISTRATORs may have privileges
  beyond those allowed to PRINCIPALs referred to in the requirements.
  (Unless otherwise noted, the individual expectations specifically
  refer to PRINCIPALs.)  It is up to individual implementations to
  control administrative access and implement the security privileges
  of ADMINISTRATORs without compromising the requirements made on
  PRINCIPALs.

  Unless noted otherwise, A,B,C are all names of non-ADMINISTRATOR
  PRINCIPALS.

5.1. Requirements related to SUBSCRIPTIONS

  When A establishes a SUBSCRIPTION to B's PRESENCE INFORMATION:

  5.1.1. The protocol MUST provide A means of identifying and
  authenticating that the PRESENTITY subscribed to is controlled by B.

  5.1.2. If A so chooses, the protocol SHOULD NOT make A's SUBSCRIPTION
  to B obvious to a third party C.

  5.1.3. The protocol MUST provide B with means of allowing an
  unauthenticated subscription by A.

  5.1.4. The protocol MUST provide A means of verifying the accurate
  receipt of the content B chooses to disclose to A.

  5.1.5. B MUST inform A if B refuses A's SUBSCRIPTION. Note that B may
  choose to accept A's SUBSCRIPTION, but fail to deliver any
  information to it (so-called "polite blocking"). See 5.1.15.

  5.1.6. The protocol MUST NOT let any third party C force A to
  subscribe to B's PRESENCE INFORMATION without A's consent.



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  5.1.7. A MUST be able to cancel her SUBSCRIPTION to B's PRESENCE
  INFORMATION at any time and for any reason.  When A does so, the
  PRESENCE SERVICE stops informing A of changes to B's PRESENCE
  INFORMATION.

  5.1.8. The protocol MUST NOT let an unauthorized party C cancel A's
  SUBSCRIPTION to B.

  5.1.9. If A's SUBSCRIPTION to B is cancelled, the service SHOULD
  inform A of the cancellation.

  5.1.10. A SHOULD be able to determine the status of A's SUBSCRIPTION
  to B, at any time.

  5.1.11. The protocol MUST provide B means of learning about A's
  SUBSCRIPTION to B, both at the time of establishing the SUBSCRIPTION
  and afterwards.

  5.1.12. The protocol MUST provide B means of identifying and
  authenticating the SUBSCRIBER's PRINCIPAL, A.

  5.1.13. It MUST be possible for B to prevent any particular PRINCIPAL
  from subscribing.

  5.1.14. It MUST be possible for B to prevent anonymous PRINCIPALS
  from subscribing.

  5.1.15. It MUST be possible for B to configure the PRESENCE SERVICE
  to deny A's subscription while appearing to A as if the subscription
  has been granted (this is sometimes called "polite blocking").  The
  protocol MUST NOT mandate the PRESENCE SERVICE to service
  subscriptions that are treated in this manner.

  5.1.16. B MUST be able to cancel A's subscription at will.

  5.1.17. The protocol MUST NOT require A to reveal A's IP address to
  B.

  5.1.18 The protocol MUST NOT require B to reveal B's IP address to A.

5.2. Requirements related to NOTIFICATION

  When a PRINCIPAL B publishes PRESENCE INFORMATION for NOTIFICATION to
  another PRINCIPAL A:

  5.2.1. The protocol MUST provide means of ensuring that only the
  PRINCIPAL A being sent the NOTIFICATION by B can read the
  NOTIFICATION.



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  5.2.2. A should receive all NOTIFICATIONS intended for her.

  5.2.3. It MUST be possible for B to prevent A from receiving
  notifications, even if A is ordinarily permitted to see such
  notifications.  It MUST be possible for B to, at its choosing, notify
  different subscribers differently, through different notification
  mechanisms or through publishing different content. This is a
  variation on "polite blocking".

  5.2.4. The protocol MUST provide means of protecting B from another
  PRINCIPAL C "spoofing" notification messages about B.

  5.2.5. The protocol MUST NOT require that A reveal A's IP address to
  B.

  5.2.6. The protocol MUST NOT require that B reveal B's IP address to
  A.

5.3. Requirements related to receiving a NOTIFICATION

  When a PRINCIPAL A receives a notification message from another
  principal B, conveying PRESENCE INFORMATION,

  5.3.1. The protocol MUST provide A means of verifying that the
  presence information is accurate, as sent by B.

  5.3.2. The protocol MUST ensure that A is only sent NOTIFICATIONS
  from entities she has subscribed to.

  5.3.3. The protocol MUST provide A means of verifying that the
  notification was sent by B.

5.4. Requirements related to INSTANT MESSAGES

  When a user A sends an INSTANT MESSAGE M to another user B,

  5.4.1. A MUST receive confirmation of non-delivery.

  5.4.2. If M is delivered, B MUST receive the message only once.

  5.4.3. The protocol MUST provide B means of verifying that A sent the
  message.

  5.4.4. B MUST be able to reply to the message via another instant
  message.

  5.4.5. The protocol MUST NOT always require A to reveal A's IP
  address, for A to send an instant message.



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  5.4.6. The protocol MUST provide A means of ensuring that no other
  PRINCIPAL C can see the content of M.

  5.4.7. The protocol MUST provide A means of ensuring that no other
  PRINCIPAL C can tamper with M, and B means to verify that no
  tampering has occurred.

  5.4.8. B must be able to read M.

  5.4.9. The protocol MUST allow A to sign the message, using existing
  standards for digital signatures.

  5.4.10. B MUST be able to prevent A from sending him messages

6. References

  [RFC 2778] Day, M., Rosenberg, J. and H. Sagano, "A Model for
             Presence and Instant Messaging", RFC 2778, February 2000.

  [RFC 2426] Dawson, F. and T. Howes, "vCard MIME Directory Profile",
             RFC 2426, September 1998.

  [RFC 2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
             Extensions (MIME) - Part One: Format of Internet Message
             Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.

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























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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


7. Authors' Addresses

  Mark Day
  SightPath, Inc.
  135 Beaver Street
  Waltham, MA 02452
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
  (Formerly [email protected])


  Sonu Aggarwal
  Microsoft Corporation
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA 98052
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]


  Gordon Mohr

  EMail: [email protected]
  (Formerly [email protected])


  Jesse Vincent
  Into Networks, Inc.
  150 Cambridgepark Drive
  Cambridge, MA 02140
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]
  (Formerly [email protected])
















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8. Appendix: Security Expectations and Deriving Requirements

  This appendix is based on the security expectations discussed on the
  impp mailing list and assembled by Jesse Vincent.  The original form
  of numbering has been preserved in this appendix (so there are
  several different items labeled B1, for example). The derived
  requirements have new numbers that are consistent with the main body
  of the document.  This appendix is included to provide a connection
  from discussions on the list to the requirements of Section 8, but it
  is not intended to introduce any new requirements beyond those
  presented in Sections 5 through 8.

8.1. PRESENCE INFORMATION

  In the case of PRESENCE INFORMATION, the controlling PRINCIPAL's
  privacy interests are paramount; we agreed that "polite blocking"
  (denying without saying that the subscription is denied, or providing
  false information) should be possible.

  8.1.1. Subscription

  When a user Alice subscribes to another person, Bob's presence info,
  Alice expects:

  A1. the PRESENTITY's PRINCIPAL, B, is identifiable and authenticated

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement.  Note that the protocol
      should provide Alice the capability of authenticating, without
      requiring that Alice authenticate every SUBSCRIPTION.  This
      caveat is made necessary by performance concerns, among others,
      and applies to many of the other requirements derived below.
      [Requirement 5.1.1]

  A2. no third party will know that A has subscribed to B.

      Discussion: This is somewhat unreasonable to enforce as is.  For
      example, in some topologies, nothing can prevent someone doing
      traffic analysis to deduce that A has subscribed to B.  We should
      merely require that the protocol not expose subscription
      information in any obvious manner. [Requirement 5.1.2]











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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  A3. A has the capability to subscribe to B's presence without B's
  knowledge, if B permits anonymous subscriptions.

      Discussion: An "anonymous subscription" above can have two
      implications - (i) B may allow an unauthenticated subscription by
      A, and (ii) B may be unaware of A's stated identity.  Requirement
      (i) is reasonable [Requirement 8.1.3], but (ii) doesn't appear to
      be a core requirement -- it can be adequately simulated via a
      subscription pseudonym.

  A4. A will accurately receive what B chooses to disclose to A
  regarding B's presence.

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement, with the "optional"
      caveat. [Requirement 8.1.4]

  A5. B will inform A if B refuses A's subscription

      Discussion:  Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.5]

  A6. No third party, C can force A to subscribe to B's presence
  without A's consent.

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.6]

  A7. A can cancel her subscription to B's presence at any time and for
  any reason. When A does so, she will receive no further information
  about B's presence information.

      Discussion: This essentially stands.  However, implementations
      may have to contend with a timing window where A receives, after
      sending her cancellation request, a notification sent by B before
      B received the cancellation request.  Therefore, the requirement
      should focus on B's ceasing to send presence information, rather
      than A's ceasing to receive it. [Requirement 5.1.7]

  A8. no third party, C, can cancel A's subscription to B.

      Discussion: Stands, although the administrative exception does
      apply. [Requirement 5.1.8]

  A9. A is notified if her subscription to B is cancelled for any
  reason.

      Discussion: Although the intent is reasonable, there are a number
      of scenarios (e.g. overburdened server, clogged network, server
      crash) where delivering a notification to A of the cancellation
      is undesirable or impossible.  Therefore, the service should make



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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


      an attempt to inform, but this is not required. [Requirement
      5.1.9]

  Bob expects:

  B1. B will be informed that A subscribed to B's presence information,
  as long as A has not subscribed anonymously.

      Discussion: This essentially stands.  However, B can also choose
      to determine A's subscription after the fact.  [Requirement
      5.1.10]

  B2. A is identifiable and authenticated.

      Discussion: This stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.11]

  B3. B can prevent a particular user, D, from subscribing.

      Discussion:  This stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.12]

  B4. B can prevent anonymous users from subscribing.

      Discussion:  This stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.13]

  B5. B's presence information is not republished by A to a third
  party, E, who does not.

      Discussion: This is practically impossible to enforce, so it is
      omitted from the requirement set.

  B6. B can deny A's subscription without letting A know that she's
  been blocked.

      Discussion: This "polite blocking" capability essentially stands;
      accepting a "denied" subscription should bear no implication on
      servicing it for status notifications. [Requirement 5.1.14]

  B7. B can cancel A's subscription at will.

      Discussion:  Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.15]

  Charlie, bob's network administrator expects:

  C1. C knows who is subscribed to B at all times.

      Discussion: Administrators should be able to determine who is
      subscribed, but needn't be continuously informed of the list of
      subscribers.  Also, in some cases user agents (e.g. proxies) may



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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


      have subscribed on behalf of users, and in these cases the
      administrator can only determine the identity of these agents,
      not their users. [Requirement 5.1.16]

  C2. C can manage all aspects of A's presence information.

      Discussion: This stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.1.17]

  C3. C can control who can access A's presence information and
  exchange instant messages with A.

      Discussion: This stands in principle, but C should be able to
      waive these capabilities if C desires. [Requirement 5.1.18]

  8.1.2. Publication

  The publisher of status information, Bob, expects:

  B1. That information about B is not provided to any entity without
  B's knowledge and consent.

      Discussion: This is nearly impossible to accomplish, so it is
      omitted from the requirements.

  8.1.3. Publication for Notification

  When information is published for notification, B expects:

  B1. only a person being sent a notification, A, can read the
  notification.

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.2.1]

  B2. A reliably receives all notifications intended for her.

      Discussion: This stands, although "Reliably" is a little strong
      (e.g. network outages, etc.). [Requirement 5.2.2]

  B3. B can prevent A from receiving notifications, even if A is
  ordinarily permitted to see such notifications.  This is a variation
  on "polite blocking."

      Discussion: This stands as a requirement. Also incorporated into
      this requirement is the notifications equivalent of the next
      expectation, B4. [Requirement 5.2.3]






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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  B4. B can provide two interested parties A and E with different
  status information at the same time. (B could represent the same
  event differently to different people.)

      Discussion: This stands as a requirement; it has been
      incorporated into the corresponding requirement for B3 above.

  B5. B expects that malicious C cannot spoof notification messages
  about B.

      Discussion: Stands in principle, but it should be optional for B.
      [Requirement 5.2.4]

  8.1.4. Receiving a Notification

  When Alice receives a notification, the recipient, Alice, expects:

  A1. That the notification information is accurate, truthful.

      Discussion: Stands in principle, although being "truthful" can't
      be a requirement, and the verification is optional for Alice.
      [Requirement 5.3.1]

  A2. That information about subscriptions remains private; people do
  not learn that A's subscription to B's information exists by watching
  notifications occur.

      Discussion: This is omitted from the requirements, as traffic
      analysis, even of encrypted traffic, can convey this information
      in some situations.

  A3. That she only receives notifications of things she's subscribed
  to.

      Discussion:  Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.3.2]

  A4. Notifications come from the apparent sender, B.

      Discussion: Stands in principle, although the verification should
      be  optional for A. [Requirement 5.3.3]

  A5. A can tell the difference between a message generated by the
  user, and a message legitimately generated by the agent on behalf of
  the user.

      Discussion: This could be quite difficult to enforce and could
      unduly restrict usage scenarios; this is omitted from the
      requirements.



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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  A6. That information given by agents on behalf of users can also be
  expected to be truthful, complete, and legitimately offered; the user
  permitted the agent to publish these notifications.

      Discussion: This is difficult to enforce and is omitted from the
      requirements.

  A7. A can prove that a notification from B was delivered in a timely
  fashion and can prove exactly how long the message took to be
  delivered.

      Discussion: This is difficult to enforce and is omitted from the
      requirements.  For example, such proof may entail global time
      synchronization mechanisms (since any system clocks have
      associated unreliability), which is outside the scope of this
      effort.

  A8. A can prove that B was indeed the sender of a given message.

      Discussion: This is a duplication of expectation A4 above and is
      reflected in the corresponding requirement 5.3.3.

8.2. INSTANT MESSAGEs

  8.2.1. Named Instant Messaging

  When a user Alice sends an instant message M to another user Bob:

  Alice expects that she:

  A1. will receive notification of non-delivery

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.1]

  Alice expects that Bob:

  B1. will receive the message

      Discussion: covered by A1 and is reflected in the corresponding
      requirement 5.4.1.

  B2. will receive the message quickly

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement, although this is also
      covered elsewhere (in the non-security requirements), so this is
      omitted from the security requirements.





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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  B3. will receive the message only once

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.2]

  B4. will be able to verify that Alice sent the message

      Discussion:  Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.3]

  B5. will not know whether there were BCCs

      Discussion: Emulating e-mail conventions and social protocols is
      not a core goal of this effort, and therefore references to
      standard mail fields are omitted from the requirements.

  B6. will be able to reply to the message

      Discussion: Stands in principle; the recipient should be able to
      reply via an instant message. [Requirement 5.4.4]

  B7. will know if he was a bcc recipient

      Discussion: Omitted, as noted above.

  B8. will not be able to determine any information about A (such as
  her location or IP address) without A's knowledge and consent.

      Discussion: "Any information about A" is too general; the
      requirement should focus on IP address.  Further, "without A's
      knowledge and consent" may be overkill. [Requirement 5.4.5]

  Alice expects that no other user Charlie will be able to:

  C1. see the content of M

      Discussion: Stands in principle, although this should not be
      mandated for all IM communication. [Requirement 5.4.6]

  C2. tamper with M

      Discussion: Stands, with the same caveat as above.
      [Requirement 5.4.7]

  C3. know that M was sent

      Discussion: It is impossible to prevent traffic analysis, and
      this is therefore omitted from the requirements.





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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  When a user Bob receives an instant message M from another user
  Alice:

  Bob expects that Bob:

  D1. will be able to read M

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.8]

  D2. will be able to verify M's authenticity (both Temporal and the
  sender's identity)

      Discussion: As noted earlier, it is not reasonable to directly
      require temporal checks.  The protocol should, however, allow
      signing messages using existing standards for signing.
      [Requirement 5.4.9]

  D3. will be able to verify M's integrity

      Discussion:  Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.10]

  D4. will be able to prevent A from sending him future messages

      Discussion: Stands as a requirement. [Requirement 5.4.11]

  Bob expects that Alice:

  E1. intended to send the message to Bob

      Discussion: This is covered by the corresponding requirement
      5.4.6 for C1 above.

  E2. informed Bob of all CCs.

      Discussion: As noted earlier, references to cc:'s are omitted
      from the requirements.

  8.2.2. Anonymous Instant Messaging

      Discussion: Anonymous instant messaging, as in "hiding the
      identity of the sender", is not deemed to be a core requirement
      of the protocol and references to it are therefore omitted from
      the requirements. Implementations may provide facilities for
      anonymous messaging if they wish, in ways that are consistent
      with the other requirements.

  When a user Alice sends an anonymous instant message to another user
  Bob:



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  Alice expects that Bob:

  B1. will receive the message

  B2. will receive the message quickly

  B3. will receive the message only once

  AB4.1. cannot know Alice sent it

  AB4.2. will know that the IM is anonymous, and not from a specific
  named user

  AB4.3   may not allow anonymous IMs

  B5. will not know whether there were BCCs

  B6. will be able to reply to the message

  Alice expects that she:

  C1. will receive notification of non-delivery

  AC2. will receive an error if the IM was refused

  Bob expects that he:

  D1. will be able to read M

  D2. will be able to verify M's authenticity (both temporal and the
  sender's identity)

  D3. will be able to verify M's integrity

  AD4. will know if an IM was sent anonymously

  AD5. will be able to automatically discard anonymous IM if desired

  AD6. will be able to control whether an error is sent to Alice if M
  is discarded.

  8.2.3. Administrator Expectations

  Charlie, Alice's network administrator expects:

  C1. that C will be able to send A instant messages at any time.

  C2. that A will receive any message he sends while A is online.



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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


  C3. that A will not be able to refuse delivery of any instant
  messages sent by C.

      Discussion for C1-C3: It is not clear this needs to be specially
      handled at the protocol level; Administrators may accomplish the
      above objectives through other means.  For example, an
      administrator may send a message to a user through the normal
      mechanisms.  This is therefore omitted from the requirements.











































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RFC 2779          Instant Messaging/Presence Protocol      February 2000


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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