Network Working Group                                           A. Houri
Request for Comments: 5344                                           IBM
Category: Informational                                          E. Aoki
                                                                AOL LLC
                                                          S. Parameswar
                                                 Microsoft  Corporation
                                                           October 2008


           Presence and Instant Messaging Peering Use Cases

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.

Abstract

  This document describes several use cases of peering of non-VoIP
  (Voice over IP) services between two or more Service Providers.
  These Service Providers create a peering relationship between
  themselves, thus enabling their users to collaborate with users on
  the other Service Provider network.  The target of this document is
  to drive requirements for peering between domains that provide the
  non-VoIP based collaboration services with presence and, in
  particular, Instant Messaging (IM).

  Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Use Cases .......................................................2
     2.1. Simple Interdomain Subscription ............................2
     2.2. List Based Interdomain Subscription ........................3
     2.3. Authorization Migration ....................................3
     2.4. Pager Mode IM ..............................................4
     2.5. Session Based IM ...........................................4
     2.6. Other Services .............................................4
     2.7. Federation and Clearing House ..............................5
  3. Security Considerations .........................................5
  4. Acknowledgments .................................................6
  5. Informative References ..........................................6









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1.  Introduction

  This document uses the terminology as defined in [1] unless otherwise
  stated.

  Real Time Collaboration (RTC) services have become as prevalent and
  essential for users on the Internet as email.  While RTC services can
  be implemented directly by users in a point-to-point fashion, they
  are often provided for, or on behalf of, a Peer Network of users
  within an administrative domain.  As the use of these services grows,
  users increasingly have the need to communicate with users not only
  within their own Peer Network but with those in other Peer Networks
  as well (similar to the old Public Switched Telephony Network (PSTN)
  that enabled global reachability).  In practice, each Peer Network is
  controlled by some domain, and so there is a need to provide for
  easier establishment of connectivity between Peer Networks and for
  the management of the relationships between the Peer Networks.  This
  document describes a set of use cases that describe how peering
  between Peer Networks may be used in non-VoIP RTC services.  The use
  cases are intended to help in identifying and capturing requirements
  that will guide and then enable a secure and easier peering between
  Peer Networks that provide non-VoIP RTC services.  The use cases for
  the VoIP RTC services are described in [2].

  Note that this document does not define requirements for a new
  protocol or for protocol extensions.  It captures the way that
  presence and Instant Messaging are currently used within enterprises
  and operator domains.

2.  Use Cases

2.1.  Simple Interdomain Subscription

  Assume two Peer Networks, Peer Network A and Peer Network B.  User
  [email protected] (hosted in Peer Network A) wants to subscribe to
  user [email protected] (hosted in Peer Network B) and get his presence
  information.  In order to do so, [email protected] could connect
  directly to example.net and subscribe to Bob's presence information.
  However, Peer Network B is willing to accept subscriptions and route
  IMs only when they are coming from its users or from other Peer
  Networks that Peer Network B trusts.

  In reality, what will happen is Peer Network A will connect to Peer
  Network B and send Alice's subscription to Bob via Peer Network B.
  When Peer Network B has new information on Bob, it will send
  notifications to Peer Network A, which will pass them to Alice.





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2.2.  List-Based Interdomain Subscription

  This is similar to the simple interdomain subscription use case,
  except in this case Alice subscribes to a Uniform Resource Identifier
  (URI) [8] that represents a list of users in Peer Network B [9] [3].

  There are several types of lists that Alice may subscribe to:

  o  Personal group - a list that is created and maintained by Alice
     and includes Alice's watch list.

  o  Public group - a list that is created and maintained by an
     administrator.  Public groups usually contain a list of specific
     people that have some common characteristic, e.g., support group
     of a company.

  o  Ad-hoc group - a list that is short lived and is usually created
     in the context of some activity that Alice is doing.  An ad-hoc
     group may be created by Alice or by some application.  Typical
     examples may be the list of people that participate with Alice in
     a conference or a game.

2.3.  Authorization Migration

     If many users from one Peer Network watch presentities [6] in
     another Peer Network, it may be possible that many watchers [6]
     from one Peer Network will subscribe to the same user in the other
     Peer Network.  However, due to privacy constraints that enable a
     user to provide different presence documents to different
     watchers, each Peer Network will have to send multiple copies of
     the watched-presence document.  The need to send multiple copies
     between the Peer Networks is very inefficient and causes redundant
     traffic between the Peer Networks.

     In order to make the subscription between Peer Networks more
     efficient there needs to be a way to enable Peer Networks to agree
     to share privacy information between them.  This will enable
     sending a single copy (the full copy) of the presence document of
     the watched user and letting the receiving Peer Network be
     responsible for sending the right values to the right watchers
     according to the delegated privacy policies of the watched users.

     Instead of sharing the watched user's privacy policies between the
     Peer Networks, it is also possible to send different copies of the
     presence document with a list of the watchers the presence
     document is intended for.  For example, if there is a set of
     watchers in one Peer Network that may see the location of the
     presentity and another set of users in the same Peer Network that



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     may not see the location information, two presence documents will
     be sent--each associated with a list of watchers that should
     receive it.  One presence document will contain the location
     information and will be associated with a list of users that may
     see it, and the other presence document will not contain the
     location information and will be associated with a list of users
     that may not see the location information. See [11].

2.4.  Pager Mode IM

     In this use case, a user from one Peer Network sends a pager mode
     [7] IM to a user on another Peer Network.

2.5.  Session Based IM

     In this use case, a user from one Peer Network creates a Message
     Session Relay Protocol (MSRP) [10] session with a user from
     another Peer Network.

2.6.  Other Services

     In addition to VoIP sessions, which are out of scope for this
     document, only presence and IM have been ratified as RFCs.  In
     addition to presence and IM, there are many other services that
     are being standardized or that may be implemented using minimal
     extensions to existing standards.  These include:

  o  N-way chat - enable a multi-participant textual chat that will
     include users from multiple Peer Networks.  See [4] for more
     details.

  o  File transfer - send files from a user in one Peer Network to a
     user in another Peer Network.  See [5] for more details.

  o  Document sharing - sharing and editing a document between users in
     different Peer Networks.

     Note: Document sharing is mentioned in this document only for
     completeness of use cases.  It is not being standardized by the
     IETF and will not be included in the requirements document that
     will result from this document.

  The list above is of course not exhaustive, as new developments in
  the world of non-VoIP RTC will surface new services.  Enabling
  peering between networks for some of the services will create a basis
  for enabling peering for future services also.





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2.7.  Federation and Clearing House

  A federation as defined in [1] enables peering between multiple Peer
  Networks.  A federation may be implemented by means of a central
  service providing a hub for the Peer Networks or, alternatively, Peer
  Networks may connect to each other in a peer-to-peer fashion.  One of
  the most important services that this hub type of federation should
  provide is authorized interconnection that enables each Peering
  Network to securely identify other Peering Networks.  Other services
  that might be provided include an N-way chat server, lawful
  interception, logging, and more.  This hub type of federation is also
  known as a "Clearing House".

  As non-VoIP services are usually text-based and consume less
  bandwidth, they may benefit from having a central service that will
  do central services such as logging for them.  For example, instead
  of requiring each Peer Network to log all messages that are being
  sent to the other Peer-Network, this service can be done by the
  Clearing House.

3.  Security Considerations

  When Peer Network A peers with Peer Network B, there are several
  security issues for which the administrator of each Peer Network will
  need mechanisms to verify:

  o  All communication channels between Peer Networks and between each
     Peer Network and the Clearing House have their authenticity and
     confidentiality protected.

  o  The other Peer Network is really the Peering Network that it
     claims to be.

  o  The other Peer Network is secure and trustworthy, such that
     information that is passed to it will not reach a third party.
     This includes information about specific users as well as
     information about the authorization policies associated with user
     information.

  o  The other Peer Network is secure and trustworthy, such that it
     will not modify or falsify data that it presents to its users
     except as required by the authorization policy provided.

  o  If there is a third party (e.g., a Clearing House) involved in the
     connection between the two Peering Networks that element is also
     secure.





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  The same issues of security are even more important from the point of
  view of the users of the Peer Networks.  Users will be concerned
  about how their privacy is being adhered to when their presence
  information is sent to the other Peer Network.  Users today are
  concerned about providing their email address to a third party when
  they register to a domain; presence contains much more sensitive
  information, and the concern of users here will be even greater.

  The privacy issue is even harder when we take into account that, in
  order to enable scalable peering between big Peer Networks, there are
  some optimizations that may require migration of the privacy
  definitions of users between Peer Network (see Section 2.3).  We can
  imagine the fiasco that would ensue if a user of one Peer Network
  were able to see the privacy information and learn he/she is listed
  in the block list of a close friend.

  This document discusses use cases for peering between Peer Networks.
  It is out of the scope of this document to provide solutions for
  security.  Nevertheless, it is obvious that the protocols that will
  enable the use cases described here will have to provide for the
  security considerations also described here.

4.  Acknowledgments

  We would like to thank Jonathan Rosenberg, Jon Peterson, Rohan Mahy,
  Jason Livingood, Alexander Mayrhofer, Joseph Salowey, Henry
  Sinnreich, and Mohamed Boucadir for their valuable input.

5.  Informative References

  [1]   Malas, D. and D. Meyer, "SPEERMINT Terminology", Work in
        Progress, February 2008.

  [2]   Uzelac, A. and Y. Lee, "VoIP SIP Peering Use Cases", Work in
        Progress, May 2008.

  [3]   Camarillo, G. and A. Roach, "Framework and Security
        Considerations for Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) URI-List
        Services", Work in Progress, November 2007.

  [4]   Niemi, A., Garcia-Martin, M., and G. Sandbakken, "Multi-party
        Instant Message (IM) Sessions Using the Message Session Relay
        Protocol (MSRP)", Work in Progress, February 2008.

  [5]   Garcia-Martin, M., Isomaki, M., Camarillo, G., Loreto, S., and
        P. Kyzivat, "A Session Description Protocol (SDP) Offer/Answer
        Mechanism to Enable File Transfer", Work in Progress, May 2008.




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

  [7]   Campbell, B., Ed., Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Huitema, C.,
        and D. Gurle, "Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Extension for
        Instant Messaging", RFC 3428, December 2002.

  [8]   Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
        Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986,
        January 2005.

  [9]   Roach, A., Campbell, B., and J. Rosenberg, "A Session
        Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Notification Extension for
        Resource Lists", RFC 4662, August 2006.

  [10]  Campbell, B., Ed., Mahy, R., Ed., and C. Jennings, Ed., "The
        Message Session Relay Protocol (MSRP)", RFC 4975, September
        2007.

  [11]  Rosenberg, J., Donovan, S., and K. McMurry. "Optimizing
        Federated Presence with View Sharing", Work in Progress, July
        2008.





























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Authors' Addresses

  Avshalom Houri
  IBM
  3 Pekris Street
  Science Park
  Rehovot,
  Israel

  EMail: [email protected]

  Edwin Aoki
  AOL LLC
  401 Ellis Street
  Mountain View, CA 94043
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]

  Sriram Parameswar
  Microsoft Corporation
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA  98052
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]

























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