Network Working Group                                        N. Charlton
Request for Comments: 3351                                      Millpark
Category: Informational                                        M. Gasson
                                                         Koru Solutions
                                                              G. Gybels
                                                             M. Spanner
                                                                   RNID
                                                            A. van Wijk
                                                               Ericsson
                                                            August 2002


     User Requirements for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
                 in Support of Deaf, Hard of Hearing
                   and Speech-impaired Individuals

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 (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document presents a set of Session Initiation Protocol
  (SIP) user requirements that support communications for deaf, hard of
  hearing and speech-impaired individuals.  These user requirements
  address the current difficulties of deaf, hard of hearing and
  speech-impaired individuals in using communications facilities, while
  acknowledging the multi-functional potential of SIP-based
  communications.

  A number of issues related to these user requirements are further
  raised in this document.

  Also included are some real world scenarios and some technical
  requirements to show the robustness of these requirements on a
  concept-level.









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Table of Contents

  1. Terminology and Conventions Used in this Document................2
  2. Introduction.....................................................3
  3. Purpose and Scope................................................4
  4. Background.......................................................4
  5. Deaf, Hard of Hearing and Speech-impaired Requirements for SIP...5
     5.1 Connection without Difficulty................................5
     5.2 User Profile.................................................6
     5.3 Intelligent Gateways.........................................6
     5.4 Inclusive Design.............................................7
     5.5 Resource Management..........................................7
     5.6 Confidentiality and Security.................................7
  6. Some Real World Scenarios........................................8
     6.1 Transcoding Service..........................................8
     6.2 Media Service Provider.......................................9
     6.3 Sign Language Interface......................................9
     6.4 Synthetic Lip-reading Support for Voice Calls...............10
     6.5 Voice-Activated Menu Systems................................10
     6.6 Conference Call.............................................11
  7. Some Suggestions for Service Providers and User Agent
     Manufacturers...................................................13
  8. Acknowledgements................................................14
     Security Considerations.........................................14
     Normative References............................................15
     Informational References........................................15
     Author's Addresses..............................................15
     Full Copyright Statement........................................17

1. Terminology and Conventions Used in this Document

  In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT","REQUIRED",
  "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
  and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14,
  RFC2119[1] and indicate requirement levels for compliant SIP
  implementations.

  For the purposes of this document, the following terms are considered
  to have these meanings:

  Abilities:  A person's capacity for communicating which could include
  a hearing or speech impairment or not.  The terms Abilities and
  Preferences apply to both caller and call-recipient.

  Preferences:  A person's choice of communication mode.  This could
  include any combination of media streams, e.g., text, audio, video.





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  The terms Abilities and Preferences apply to both caller and
  call-recipient.

  Relay Service:  A third-party or intermediary that enables
  communications between deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired
  people, and people without hearing or speech-impairment.  Relay
  Services form a subset of the activities of Transcoding Services (see
  definition).

  Transcoding Services:  A human or automated third party acting as an
  intermediary in any session between two other User Agents (being a
  User Agent itself), and transcoding one stream into another (e.g.,
  voice to text or vice versa).

  Textphone:  Sometimes called a TTY (teletypewriter), TDD
  (telecommunications device for the deaf) or a minicom, a textphone
  enables a deaf, hard of hearing or speech-impaired person to place a
  call to a telephone or another textphone.  Some textphones use the
  V.18[3] protocol as a standard for communication with other textphone
  communication protocols world-wide.

  User:  A deaf, hard of hearing or speech-impaired individual.  A user
  is otherwise referred to as a person or individual, and users are
  referred to as people.

  Note:  For the purposes of this document, a deaf, hard of hearing, or
  speech-impaired person is an individual who chooses to use SIP
  because it can minimize or eliminate constraints in using common
  communication devices.  As SIP promises a total communication
  solution for any kind of person, regardless of ability and
  preference, there is no attempt to specifically define deaf, hard of
  hearing or speech-impaired in this document.

2. Introduction

  The background for this document is the recent development of SIP[2]
  and SIP-based communications, and a growing awareness of deaf, hard
  of hearing and speech-impaired issues in the technical community.

  The SIP capacity to simplify setting up, managing and tearing down
  communication sessions between all kinds of User Agents has specific
  implications for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired
  individuals.








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  As SIP enables multiple sessions with translation between multiple
  types of media, these requirements aim to provide the standard for
  recognizing and enabling these interactions, and for a communications
  model that includes any and all types of SIP-networking abilities and
  preferences.

3. Purpose and Scope

  The scope of this document is firstly to present a current set of
  user requirements for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired
  individuals through SIP-enabled communications.  These are then
  followed by some real world scenarios in SIP-communications that
  could be used in a test environment, and some concepts of how these
  requirements can be developed by service providers and User Agent
  manufacturers.

  These recommendations make explicit the needs of a currently often
  disadvantaged user-group and attempt to match them with the capacity
  of SIP.  It is not the intention here to prioritize the needs of
  deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people in a way that would
  penalize other individuals.

  These requirements aim to encourage developers and manufacturers
  world-wide to consider the specific needs of deaf, hard of hearing
  and speech-impaired individuals.  This document presents a
  world-vision where deafness, hard of hearing or speech impairment are
  no longer a barrier to communication.

4. Background

  Deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people are currently
  often unable to use commonly available communication devices.
  Although this is documented[4], this does not mean that developers or
  manufacturers are always aware of this.  Communication devices for
  deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people are
  currently often primitive in design, expensive, and non-compatible
  with progressively designed, cheaper and more adaptable communication
  devices for other individuals.  For example, many models of textphone
  are unable to communicate with other models.

  Additionally, non-technical human communications, for example sign
  languages or lip-reading, are non-standard around the world.









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  There are intermediary or third-party relay services (e.g.
  transcoding services) that facilitate communications, uni- or bi-
  directional, for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people.
  Currently relay services are mostly operator-assisted (manual),
  although methods of partial automation are being implemented in some
  areas.  These services enable full access to modern facilities and
  conveniences for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people.
  Although these services are somewhat limited, their value is
  undeniable as compared to their previous complete unavailability.

  Yet communication methods in recent decades have proliferated:
  email, mobile phones, video streaming, etc.  These methods are an
  advance in the development of data transfer technologies between
  devices.

  Developers and advocates of SIP agree that it is a protocol that not
  only anticipates the growth in real-time communications between
  convergent networks, but also fulfills the potential of the Internet
  as a communications and information forum.  Further, they agree that
  these developments allow a standard of communication that can be
  applied throughout all networking communities, regardless of
  abilities and preferences.

5. Deaf, Hard of Hearing and Speech-impaired Requirements for SIP

  Introduction

  The user requirements in this section are provided for the benefit of
  service providers, User Agent manufacturers and any other interested
  parties in the development of products and services for deaf, hard of
  hearing and speech-impaired people.

  The user requirements are as follows:

5.1 Connection without Difficulty

  This requirement states:

  Whatever the preferences and abilities of the user and User Agent,
  there SHOULD be no difficulty in setting up SIP sessions.  These
  sessions could include multiple proxies, call routing decisions,
  transcoding services, e.g., the relay service Typetalk[5] or other
  media processing, and could include multiple simultaneous or
  alternative media streams.







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  This means that any User Agent in the conversation (including
  transcoding services) MUST be able to add or remove a media stream
  from the call without having to tear it down and re-establish it.

5.2 User Profile

  This requirement states:

  Deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired user abilities and
  preferences (i.e., user profile) MUST be communicable by SIP, and
  these abilities and preferences MUST determine the handling of the
  session.

  The User Profile for a deaf, hard of hearing or speech-impaired
  person might include details about:

  - How media streams are received and transmitted (text, voice, video,
    or any combination, uni- or bi-directional).

  - Redirecting specific media streams through a transcoding service
    (e.g., the relay service Typetalk)

  - Roaming (e.g., a deaf person accessing their User Profile from a
    web-interface at an Internet cafe)

  - Anonymity: i.e., not revealing that a deaf person is calling, even
    through a transcoding service (e.g., some relay services inform the
    call-recipient that there is an incoming text call without saying
    that a deaf person is calling).

    Part of this requirement is to ensure that deaf, hard of hearing
    and speech-impaired people can keep their preferences and abilities
    confidential from others, to avoid possible discrimination or
    prejudice, while still being able to establish a SIP session.

5.3 Intelligent Gateways

  This requirement states:

  SIP SHOULD support a class of User Agents to perform as gateways for
  legacy systems designed for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired
  people.

  For example, an individual could have a SIP User Agent acting as a
  gateway to a PSTN legacy textphone.






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5.4 Inclusive Design

  This requirement states:

  Where applicable, design concepts for communications (devices,
  applications, etc.) MUST include the abilities and preferences of
  deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people.

  Transcoding services and User Agents MUST be able to connect with
  each other regardless of the provider or manufacturer.  This means
  that new User Agents MUST be able to support legacy protocols through
  appropriate gateways.

5.5 Resource Management

  This requirement states:

  User Agents SHOULD be able to identify the content of a media stream
  in order to obtain such information as the cost of the media stream,
  if a transcoding service can support it, etc.

  User Agents SHOULD be able to choose among transcoding services and
  similar services based on their capabilities (e.g., whether a
  transcoding service carries a particular media stream), and any
  policy constraints they impose (e.g., charging for use).  It SHOULD
  be possible for User Agents to discover the availability of
  alternative media streams and to choose from them.

5.6 Confidentiality and Security

  This requirement states:

  All third-party or intermediaries (transcoding services) employed in
  a session for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people MUST
  offer a confidentiality policy.  All information exchanged in this
  type of session SHOULD be secure, that is, erased before
  confidentiality is breached, unless otherwise required.

  This means that transcoding services (e.g., interpretation,
  translation) MUST publish their confidentiality and security
  policies.










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6. Some Real World Scenarios

  These scenarios are intended to show some of the various types of
  media streams that would be initiated, managed, directed, and
  terminated in a SIP-enabled network, and shows how some resources
  might be managed between SIP-enabled networks, transcoding services
  and service providers.

  To illustrate the communications dynamic of these kinds of scenarios,
  each one specifically mentions the kind of media streams transmitted,
  and whether User Agents and Transcoding Services are involved.

6.1 Transcoding Service

  In this scenario, a hearing person calls the household of a deaf
  person and a hearing person.

  1. A voice conversation is initiated between the hearing
     participants:

     ( Person A) <-----Voice ---> ( Person B)

  2. During the conversation, the hearing person asks to talk with the
     deaf person, while keeping the voice connection open so that voice
     to voice communications can continue if required.

  3. A Relay Service is invited into the conversation.

  4. The Relay Service transcodes the hearing person's words into text.

  5. Text from the hearing person's voice appears on the display of the
     deaf person's User Agent.

  6. The deaf person types a response.

  7. The Relay Service receives the text and reads it to the hearing
     person:

     (         ) <------------------Voice----------------> (         )
     (Person A ) -----Voice---> ( Voice To Text  ) -Text-> (Person B )
     (         ) <----Voice---- (Service Provider) <-Text- (         )

  8. The hearing person asks to talk with the hearing person in the
     deaf person's household.

  9. The Relay Service withdraws from the call.





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6.2 Media Service Provider

  In this scenario, a deaf person wishes to receive the content of a
  radio program through a text stream transcoded from the program's
  audio stream.

  1. The deaf person attempts to establish a connection to the radio
     broadcast, with User Agent preferences set to receiving audio
     stream as text.

  2. The User Agent of the deaf person queries the radio station User
     Agent on whether a text stream is available, other than the audio
     stream.

  3. However, the radio station has no text stream available for a deaf
     listener, and responds in the negative.

  4. As no text stream is available, the deaf person's User Agent
     requests a voice-to-text transcoding service (e.g., a real-time
     captioning service) to come into the conversation space.

  5. The transcoding service User Agent identifies the audio stream as
     a radio broadcast.  However, the policy of the transcoding service
     is that it does not accept radio broadcasts because it would
     overload their resources far too quickly.

  6. In this case, the connection fails.

  Alternatively, continuing from 2 above:

  3. The radio station does provide text with their audio streams.

  4. The deaf person receives a text stream of the radio program.

  Note:  To support deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people,
  service providers are encouraged to provide text with audio streams.

6.3 Sign Language Interface

  In this scenario, a deaf person enables a signing avatar (e.g.,
  ViSiCAST[6]) by setting up a User Agent to receive audio streams as
  XML data that will operate an avatar for sign-language.  For outgoing
  communications, the deaf person types text that is transcoded into an
  audio stream for the other conversation participant.







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For example:

(         )-Voice->(Voice To Avatar Commands) ----XMLData-->(        )
( hearing )                                                 (deaf    )
( Person A)<-Voice-( Text To Voice  ) <--------Text-------- (Person B)
(         )        (Service Provider)                       (        )

6.4 Synthetic Lip-speaking Support for Voice Calls

  In order to receive voice calls, a hard of hearing person uses lip-
  speaking avatar software (e.g., Synface[7]) on a PC.  The lip-
  speaking software processes voice (audio) stream data and displays a
  synthetic animated face that a hard of hearing person may be able to
  lip-read.  During a conversation, the hard of hearing person uses the
  lip-speaking software as support for understanding the audio stream.

  For example:

     (         ) <------------------Voice-------------->(         )
     ( hearing )                    ( PC with     )     ( hard of )
     ( Person A) -------Voice-----> ( lip-speaking)---->( hearing )
     (         )                    ( software    )     ( Person B)

6.5 Voice Activated Menu Systems

  In this scenario, a deaf person wishing to book cinema tickets with a
  credit card, uses a textphone to place the call.  The cinema employs
  a voice-activated menu system for film titles and showing times.

  1. The deaf person places a call to the cinema with a textphone:

        (Textphone) <-----Text ---> (Voice-activated System)

  2. The cinema's voice-activated menu requests an auditory response to
     continue.

  3. A Relay Service is invited into the conversation.

  4. The Relay Service transcodes the prompts of the voice-activated
     menu into text.

  5. Text from the voice-activated menu appears on the display of the
     deaf person's textphone.

  6. The deaf person types a response.






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  7. The Relay Service receives the text and reads it to the voice-
     activated system:

  (           )         (Relay Service   )          (               )
  ( deaf      ) -Text-> (Provider        ) -Voice-> (Voice-Activated)
  ( Person A  ) <-Text- (Text To Voice   ) <-Voice- (System         )

  8. The transaction is finalized with a confirmed booking time.

  9. The Relay Service withdraws from the call.

6.6 Conference Call

  A conference call is scheduled between five people:

  - Person A listens and types text (hearing, no speech)
  - Person B recognizes sign language and signs back (deaf, no speech)
  - Person C reads text and speaks (deaf or hearing impaired)
  - Person D listens and speaks
  - Person E recognizes sign language and reads text and signs

  A conference call server calls the five people and based on their
  preferences sets up the different transcoding services required.
  Assuming English is the base language for the call, the following
  intermediate transcoding services are invoked:

  - A transcoding service (English speech to English text)
  - An English text to sign language service
  - A sign language to English text service
  - An English text to English speech service

  Note:  In order to translate from English speech to sign language, a
  chain of intermediate transcoding services was used (transcoding and
  English text to sign language) because there was no speech-to-sign
  language available for direct translation.  Accordingly, the same
  applied for the translation from sign language to English speech.















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(Person A) ----- Text ----> (  Text-to-SL  ) --- Video ----> (Person B)
          ---------------------- Text --------------------> (Person C)
          ----- Text ----> (Text-to-Speech) --- Voice ----> (Person D)
          ---------------------- Text --------------------> (Person E)
          ----- Text ----> (  Text-to-SL  ) --- Video ----> (Person E)
(Person B) -Video-> (SL-to-Text) -Text-> (Text-to-Speech) -> (Person A)
          ---- Video ----> (  SL-to-Text  ) ---- Text ----> (Person C)
          -Video-> (SL-to-Text) -Text-> (Text-to-Speech) -> (Person D)
          --------------------- Video --------------------> (Person E)
          ---- Video ----> (  SL-to-Text  ) ---- Text ----> (Person E)
(Person C) --------------------- Voice --------------------> (Person A)
          Voice->(Speech-to-Text)-Text->(Text-to-SL)-Video->(Person B)
          --------------------- Voice --------------------> (Person D)
          ---- Voice ----> (Speech-to-Text) ---- Text ----> (Person E)
          Voice->(Speech-to-Text)-Text->(Text-to-SL)-Video->(Person E)
(Person D) --------------------- Voice --------------------> (Person A)
          Voice->(Speech-to-Text)-Text->(Text-to-SL)-Video->(Person B)
          ---- Voice ----> (Speech-to-Text) ---- Text ----> (Person C)
          ---- Voice ----> (Speech-to-Text) ---- Text ----> (Person E)
          Voice->(Speech-to-Text)-Text->(Text-to-SL)-Video->(Person E)
(Person E) -Video-> (SL-to-Text) -Text-> (Text-to-Speech) -> (Person A)
          --------------------- Video --------------------> (person B)
          ---- Video ----> (  SL-to-Text  ) ---- Text ----> (Person C)
          -Video-> (SL-to-Text) -Text-> (Text-to-Speech) -> (Person D)

  Remarks: - Some services might be shared by users and/or other
             services.

           - Person E uses two parallel streams (SL and English Text).
             The User Agent might perform time synchronisation when
             displaying the streams.  However, this would require
             synchronisation information to be present on the streams.

           - The session protocols might support optional buffering of
             media streams, so that users and/or intermediate services
             could go back to previous content or to invoke a
             transcoding service for content they just missed.

           - Hearing impaired users might still receive audio as well,
             which they will use to drive some visual indicators so
             that they can better see where, for instance, the pauses
             are in the conversation.









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7. Some Suggestions for Service Providers and User Agent Manufacturers

  This section is included to encourage service providers and user
  agent manufacturers in developing products and services that can be
  used by as wide a range of individuals as possible, including deaf,
  hard of hearing and speech-impaired people.

  - Service providers and User Agent manufacturers can offer to a deaf,
    hard of hearing and speech-impaired person the possibility of being
    able to prevent their specific abilities and preferences from being
    made public in any transaction.

  - If a User Agent performs auditory signalling, for example a pager,
    it could also provide another signalling method; visual (e.g., a
    flashing light) or tactile (e.g., vibration).

  - Service providers who allow the user to store specific abilities
    and preferences or settings (i.e., a user profile) might consider
    storing these settings in a central repository, accessible no
    matter what the location of the user and regardless of the User
    Agent used at that time or location.

  - If there are several transcoding services available, the User Agent
    can be set to select the most economical/highest quality service.

  - The service provider can show the cost per minute and any minimum
    charge of a transcoding service call before a session starts,
    allowing the user a choice of engaging in the service or not.

  - Service providers are encouraged to offer an alternative stream to
    an audio stream, for example, text or data streams that operate
    avatars, etc.

  - Service providers are encouraged to provide a text alternative to
    voice-activated menus, e.g., answering and voice mail systems.

  - Manufacturers of voice-activated software are encouraged to provide
    an alternative visual format for software prompts, menus, messages,
    and status information.

  - Manufacturers of mobile phones are encouraged to design equipment
    that avoids electro-magnetic interference with hearing aids.

  - All services for interpreting, transliterating, or facilitating
    communications for deaf, hard of hearing and speech-impaired people
    are required to:





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    - Keep information exchanged during the transaction strictly
      confidential

    - Enable information exchange literally and simply, without
      deviating and compromising the content

    - Facilitate communication without bias, prejudice or opinion

    - Match skill-sets to the requirements of the users of the service

    - Behave in a professional and appropriate manner

    - Be fair in pricing of services

    - Strive to improve the skill-sets used for their services.

  - Conference call services might consider ways to allow users who
    employ transcoding services (which usually introduce a delay) to
    have real-time information sufficient to be able to identify gaps
    in the conversation so they could inject comments, as well as ways
    to raise their hand, vote and carry out other activities where
    timing of their response relative to the real-time conversation is
    important.

8. Acknowledgements

  The authors would like to thank the following individuals for their
  contributions to this document:

  David R. Oran, Cisco
  Mark Watson, Nortel Networks
  Brian Grover, RNID
  Anthony Rabin, RNID
  Michael Hammer, Cisco
  Henry Sinnreich, Worldcom
  Rohan Mahy, Cisco
  Julian Branston, Cedalion Hosting Services
  Judy Harkins, Gallaudet University, Washington, D.C.
  Cary Barbin, Gallaudet University, Washington, D.C.
  Gregg Vanderheiden, Trace R&D Center University of Wisconsin-Madison
  Gottfried Zimmerman, Trace R&D Center University of Wisconsin-Madison

Security Considerations

  This document presents some privacy and security considerations.
  They are treated in Section 5.6 Confidentiality and Security.





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Normative References

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

  [2] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
      Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:
      Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.

Informational References

  [3] International Telecommunication Union (ITU), "Operational and
      interworking requirements for DCEs operating in the text
      telephone mode". ITU-T Recommendation V.18, November 2000.

  [4] Moore, Matthew, et al. "For Hearing People Only: Answers to Some
      of the Most Commonly Asked Questions About the Deaf Community,
      Its Culture, and the Deaf Reality". MSM Productions Ltd., 2nd
      Edition, September 1993.

  [5] http://www.typetalk.org.

  [6] http://www.visicast.co.uk.

  [7] http://www.speech.kth.se/teleface.

Authors' Addresses

  Nathan Charlton
  Millpark Limited
  52 Coborn Road
  London E3 2DG
  Tel: +44-7050 803628
  Fax: +44-7050 803628
  EMail: [email protected]


  Mick Gasson
  Koru Solutions
  30 Howland Way
  London SE16 6HN
  Tel: +44-20 7237 3488
  Fax: +44-20 7237 3488
  EMail: [email protected]







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RFC 3351   SIP for Deaf, Hard of Hearing and Speech Impaired August 2002


  Guido Gybels
  RNID
  19-23 Featherstone Street
  London EC1Y 8SL
  Tel: +44-20 7296 8000
  Textphone: +44-20 7296 8001
  Fax: +44-20 7296 8199
  EMail: [email protected]

  Mike Spanner
  RNID
  19-23 Featherstone Street
  London EC1Y 8SL
  Tel: +44-20 7296 8000
  Textphone: +44-20 7296 8001
  Fax: +44-20 7296 8199
  EMail: [email protected]

  Arnoud van Wijk
  Ericsson EuroLab Netherlands BV
  P.O. Box 8
  5120 AA Rijen
  The Netherlands
  Fax: +31-161-247569
  EMail: [email protected]

  Comments can be sent to the SIPPING mailing list.
























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RFC 3351   SIP for Deaf, Hard of Hearing and Speech Impaired August 2002


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