Network Working Group                                   K. Fujiwara, Ed.
Request for Comments: 5504                                Y. Yoneya, Ed.
Category: Experimental                                              JPRS
                                                             March 2009


     Downgrading Mechanism for Email Address Internationalization

Status of This Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.
  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2009 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 in effect on the date of
  publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
  Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
  and restrictions with respect to this document.

Abstract

  Traditional mail systems handle only ASCII characters in SMTP
  envelope and mail header fields.  The Email Address
  Internationalization (UTF8SMTP) extension allows UTF-8 characters in
  SMTP envelope and mail header fields.  To avoid rejecting
  internationalized email messages when a server in the delivery path
  does not support the UTF8SMTP extension, some sort of converting
  mechanism is required.  This document describes a downgrading
  mechanism for Email Address Internationalization.  Note that this is
  a way to downgrade, not tunnel.  There is no associated up-conversion
  mechanism, although internationalized email clients might use
  original internationalized addresses or other data when displaying or
  replying to downgraded messages.











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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Terminology .....................................................4
  3. New Header Fields Definition ....................................5
     3.1. Envelope Information Preservation Header Fields ............5
     3.2. Address Header Fields' Preservation Header Fields ..........6
     3.3. Unknown Header Fields' Preservation Header Fields ..........6
  4. SMTP Downgrading ................................................7
     4.1. Path Element Downgrading ...................................7
     4.2. ORCPT downgrading ..........................................8
  5. Email Header Fields Downgrading .................................8
     5.1. Downgrading Method for Each ABNF Element ...................8
          5.1.1. RECEIVED Downgrading ................................9
          5.1.2. UNSTRUCTURED Downgrading ............................9
          5.1.3. WORD Downgrading ....................................9
          5.1.4. COMMENT Downgrading .................................9
          5.1.5. MIME-VALUE Downgrading ..............................9
          5.1.6. DISPLAY-NAME Downgrading ............................9
          5.1.7. MAILBOX Downgrading .................................9
          5.1.8. ENCAPSULATION Downgrading ..........................10
          5.1.9. TYPED-ADDRESS Downgrading ..........................10
     5.2. Downgrading Method for Each Header Field ..................10
          5.2.1. Address Header Fields That Contain <address>s ......10
          5.2.2. Address Header Fields with Typed Addresses .........11
          5.2.3. Downgrading Non-ASCII in Comments ..................11
          5.2.4. Received Header Field ..............................11
          5.2.5. MIME Content Header Fields .........................12
          5.2.6. Non-ASCII in <unstructured> ........................12
          5.2.7. Non-ASCII in <phrase> ..............................12
          5.2.8. Other Header Fields ................................12
  6. MIME Body-Part Header Field Downgrading ........................12
  7. Security Considerations ........................................13
  8. Implementation Notes ...........................................14
     8.1. RFC 2047 Encoding .........................................14
     8.2. Trivial Downgrading .......................................15
     8.3. 7bit Transport Consideration ..............................15
  9. IANA Considerations ............................................16
  10. Acknowledgements ..............................................18
  11. References ....................................................18
     11.1. Normative References .....................................18
     11.2. Informative References ...................................19
  Appendix A.  Examples .............................................20
    A.1.  Downgrading Example 1 .....................................20
    A.2.  Downgrading Example 2 .....................................22






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1.  Introduction

  Traditional mail systems, which are defined by [RFC5321] and
  [RFC5322], allow ASCII characters in SMTP envelope and mail header
  field values.  The UTF8SMTP extension ([RFC4952], [RFC5335], and
  [RFC5336]) allows UTF-8 characters in SMTP envelope and mail header
  field values.

  If an envelope address or header field contains non-ASCII characters,
  the message cannot be delivered unless every system in the delivery
  path supports UTF8SMTP.  This document describes a downgrading
  mechanism to avoid rejection of such messages when a server that does
  not support the UTF8SMTP extension is encountered.  This downgrading
  mechanism converts envelope and mail header fields to an all-ASCII
  representation.

  [RFC5335] allows UTF-8 characters to be used in mail header fields
  and MIME header fields.  The downgrading mechanism specified here
  converts mail header fields and MIME header fields to ASCII.

  This document does not change any protocols except by defining new
  header fields.  It describes the conversion method from the
  internationalized email envelopes/messages that are defined in
  [RFC4952], [RFC5335], and [RFC5336] to the traditional email
  envelopes/messages defined in [RFC5321] and [RFC5322].

  Section 3.2 of [RFC5336] defines when downgrading occurs.  If the
  SMTP client has a UTF8SMTP envelope or an internationalized message
  and the SMTP server doesn't support the UTF8SMTP extension, then the
  SMTP client MUST NOT send a UTF8SMTP envelope or an internationalized
  message to the SMTP server.  The section lists 4 choices in this
  case.  The fourth choice is downgrading, as described here.

  Downgrading may be implemented in Mail User Agents (MUAs), Mail
  Submission Agents (MSAs), and Mail Transport Agents (MTAs) that act
  as SMTP clients.  It may also be implemented in Message Delivery
  Agents (MDAs), Post Office Protocol (POP) servers, and IMAP servers
  that store or offer UTF8SMTP envelopes or internationalized messages
  to non-UTF8SMTP-compliant systems, which include message stores.

  This document tries to define the downgrading process clearly and it
  preserves the original internationalized email information as much as
  possible.








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  Downgrading in UTF8SMTP consists of the following four parts:

  o  New header field definitions
  o  SMTP downgrading
  o  Email header field downgrading
  o  MIME header field downgrading

  In Section 3 of this document, many header fields starting with
  "Downgraded-" are introduced.  They preserve the original envelope
  information and the original header fields.

  SMTP downgrading is described in Section 4.  It generates ASCII-only
  envelope information from a UTF8SMTP envelope.

  Email header field downgrading is described in Section 5.  It
  generates ASCII-only header fields.

  MIME header fields are expanded in [RFC5335].  MIME header field
  downgrading is described in Section 6.  It generates ASCII-only MIME
  header fields.

  Displaying downgraded messages that originally contained
  internationalized email addresses or internationalized header fields
  is described in an another document ([DISPLAY]).

2.  Terminology

  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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

  All specialized terms used in this specification are defined in the
  Email Address Internationalization (EAI) overview [RFC4952], in the
  mail specifications [RFC5321] [RFC5322], or in the MIME documents
  [RFC2045] [RFC2047] [RFC2183] [RFC2231].  The terms "ASCII address",
  "internationalized email address", "non-ASCII address", "i18mail
  address", "UTF8SMTP", "message", and "mailing list" are used with the
  definitions from [RFC4952].

  This document depends on [RFC5335], [RFC5336], and [RFC5337].  Key
  words used in those documents are used in this document, too.

  The term "non-ASCII" refers to a UTF-8 string that contains at least
  one non-ASCII character.







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  A "UTF8SMTP envelope" has email originator/recipient addresses
  expanded by [RFC5336] and [RFC5337].

  A "UTF8SMTP message" is an email message expanded by [RFC5335].

3.  New Header Fields Definition

  New header fields starting with "Downgraded-" are defined here to
  preserve those original envelope and mail header field values that
  contain UTF-8 characters.  During downgrading, one new "Downgraded-"
  header field is added for each original envelope or mail header field
  that cannot be passed as-is to a server that does not support
  UTF8SMTP.  The original envelope or mail header field is removed or
  rewritten.  Only those envelope and mail header fields that contain
  non-ASCII characters are affected.  The result of this process is a
  message that is compliant with existing email specifications
  [RFC5321] and [RFC5322].  The original internationalized information
  can be retrieved by examining the "Downgraded-" header fields that
  were added.

3.1.  Envelope Information Preservation Header Fields

  SMTP envelope downgraded information <downgraded-envelope-addr>
  consists of the original non-ASCII address and the downgraded all-
  ASCII address.  The ABNF [RFC5234] syntax is as follows:

  downgraded-envelope-addr = [FWS] "<" [ A-d-l ":" ] uMailbox
                             FWS "<" Mailbox ">" ">" [CFWS]

  <uMailbox> is defined in [RFC5336]; <Mailbox> and <A-d-l> are defined
  in Section 4.1.2 of [RFC5321].

  Two header fields, "Downgraded-Mail-From:" and "Downgraded-Rcpt-To:",
  are defined to preserve SMTP envelope downgraded information.  The
  header field syntax is specified as follows:

  fields             =/ downgradedmailfrom / downgradedrcptto

  downgradedmailfrom =  "Downgraded-Mail-From:" unstructured CRLF

  downgradedrcptto   =  "Downgraded-Rcpt-To:"   unstructured CRLF

  The unstructured content is downgraded-envelope-addr and treated as
  if it were unstructured, with [RFC2047] encoding (and charset UTF-8)
  as needed.






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3.2.  Address Header Fields' Preservation Header Fields

  The address header fields' preservation header fields are defined to
  preserve the original header field.  Their value field holds the
  original header field value.  The header field syntax is specified as
  follows:

  fields                   =/ known-downgraded-headers ":"
                              unstructured CRLF

  known-downgraded-headers =  "Downgraded-" original-headers

  original-headers         =  "From" / "Sender" /
                              "To" / "Cc" / "Bcc" /
                              "Reply-To" /
                              "Resent-From" / "Resent-Sender" /
                              "Resent-To" / "Resent-Cc" /
                              "Resent-Bcc" / "Resent-Reply-To" /
                              "Return-Path" /
                              "Disposition-Notification-To"

  To preserve a header field in a "Downgraded-" header field:

  1.  Generate a new "Downgraded-" header field whose value is the
      original header field value.

  2.  Treat the generated header field content as if it were
      unstructured, and then apply [RFC2047] encoding with charset
      UTF-8 as necessary so that the result is ASCII.

3.3.  Unknown Header Fields' Preservation Header Fields

  The unknown header fields' preservation header fields are defined to
  encapsulate those original header fields that contain non-ASCII
  characters and are not otherwise provided for in this specification.
  The encapsulation header field name is the concatenation of
  "Downgraded-" and the original name.  The value field holds the
  original header field value.

  The header field syntax is specified as follows:

  fields     =/ unknown-downgraded-headers ":" unstructured CRLF

  unknown-downgraded-headers = "Downgraded-" original-header-field-name

  original-header-field-name = field-name

  field-name =  1*ftext



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  ftext      =  %d33-57 /           ; Any character except
                %d59-126            ;  controls, SP, and ":".

  To encapsulate a header field in a "Downgraded-" header field:

  1.  Generate a new "Downgraded-" header field whose value is the
      original header field value.

  2.  Treat the generated header field content as if it were
      unstructured, and then apply [RFC2047] encoding with charset
      UTF-8 as necessary so the result is ASCII.

  3.  Remove the original header field.

4.  SMTP Downgrading

  The targets of downgrading elements in an SMTP envelope are below:

  o  <reverse-path> of MAIL FROM command
  o  <forward-path> of RCPT TO command
  o  ORCPT parameter of RCPT TO command

  <reverse-path> and <forward-path> are described in [RFC5321] and
  [RFC5336].  The ORCPT parameter is described in [RFC3461] and
  [RFC5337].

4.1.  Path Element Downgrading

  Downgrading the <path> of MAIL FROM and RCPT TO commands uses the
  ALT-ADDRESS parameter defined in [RFC5336].  An SMTP command is
  downgradable if the <path> contains a non-ASCII address and the
  command has an ALT-ADDRESS parameter that specifies an ASCII address.
  Since only non-ASCII addresses are downgradable, specifying an ALT-
  ADDRESS value for an all-ASCII address is invalid for use with this
  specification, and no interpretation is assigned to it.  This
  restriction allows for future extension of the specification even
  though no such extensions are currently anticipated.

  Note that even if no downgrading is performed on the envelope,
  message header fields and message body MIME header fields that
  contain non-ASCII characters MUST be downgraded.  This is described
  in Sections 5 and 6.

  When downgrading, replace each <path> that contains a non-ASCII mail
  address with its specified alternative ASCII address, and preserve
  the original information using "Downgraded-Mail-From" and





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  "Downgraded-Rcpt-To" header fields as defined in Section 3.  Before
  replacing, decode the ALT-ADDRESS parameter value because it is
  encoded as xtext [RFC3461].

  To avoid disclosing recipient addresses, the downgrading process MUST
  NOT add the "Downgraded-Rcpt-To:" header field if the SMTP
  downgrading targets multiple recipients.  See Section 7 for more
  details.

  As a result of the recipient address downgrading, the domain part of
  the recipient address prior to downgrading might be different from
  the domain part of the new recipient address.  If the result of
  address resolution for the domain part of the new recipient address
  contains the server at the connection destination of the SMTP session
  for the recipient address prior to downgrading, the SMTP connection
  is valid for the new recipient address.  Otherwise, the downgrading
  process MUST NOT send the downgraded message to the new recipient
  address via the connection and MUST try to send the downgraded
  message to the new recipient address.

4.2.  ORCPT downgrading

  The "RCPT TO" command can have an ORCPT parameter if the Delivery
  Status Notification (DSN) extension [RFC3461] is supported.  If the
  ORCPT parameter contains a "utf-8" type address and the address
  contains raw non-ASCII characters, the address MUST be converted to
  utf-8-addr-xtext form.  Those forms are described in [RFC5337] and
  clarified by successor documents such as [DSNBIS].

  Before converting to utf-8-addr-xtext form, remove xtext encoding.

5.  Email Header Fields Downgrading

  This section defines the conversion method to ASCII for each header
  field that may contain non-ASCII characters.

  [RFC5335] expands "Received:" header fields; [RFC5322] describes ABNF
  elements <mailbox>, <word>, <comment>, <unstructured>; [RFC2045]
  describes ABNF element <value>.

5.1.  Downgrading Method for Each ABNF Element

  Header field downgrading is defined below for each ABNF element.
  Downgrading an unknown header field is also defined as ENCAPSULATION
  downgrading.  Converting the header field terminates when no non-
  ASCII characters remain in the header field.





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5.1.1.  RECEIVED Downgrading

  If the header field name is "Received:" and the FOR clause contains a
  non-ASCII address, remove the FOR clause from the header field.
  Other parts (not counting <comment>s) should not contain non-ASCII
  values.

5.1.2.  UNSTRUCTURED Downgrading

  If the header field has an <unstructured> field that contains non-
  ASCII characters, apply [RFC2047] encoding with charset UTF-8.

5.1.3.  WORD Downgrading

  If the header field has any <word> fields that contain non-ASCII
  characters, apply [RFC2047] encoding with charset UTF-8.

5.1.4.  COMMENT Downgrading

  If the header field has any <comment> fields that contain non-ASCII
  characters, apply [RFC2047] encoding with charset UTF-8.

5.1.5.  MIME-VALUE Downgrading

  If the header field has any <value> elements defined by [RFC2045] and
  the elements contain non-ASCII characters, encode the <value>
  elements according to [RFC2231] with charset UTF-8 and leave the
  language information empty.  If the <value> element is <quoted-
  string> and it contains <CFWS> outside the DQUOTE, remove the <CFWS>
  before this conversion.

5.1.6.  DISPLAY-NAME Downgrading

  If the header field has any <address> (<mailbox> or <group>) elements
  and they have <display-name> elements that contain non-ASCII
  characters, encode the <display-name> elements according to [RFC2047]
  with charset UTF-8.  DISPLAY-NAME downgrading is the same algorithm
  as WORD downgrading.

5.1.7.  MAILBOX Downgrading

  The <mailbox> elements have no equivalent format for non-ASCII
  addresses.  If the header field has any <mailbox> elements that
  contain non-ASCII characters, preserve the header field in the
  corresponding "Downgraded-" header field, which is defined in
  Section 3.2, and rewrite each <mailbox> element to ASCII-only format.
  The <mailbox> element that contains non-ASCII characters is one of
  three formats.



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  o  [ Display-name ] "<" Utf8-addr-spec 1*FCS "<" Addr-spec ">>"

        Rewrite it as:
        [ Display-name ] "<" Addr-spec ">"

  o  [ Display-name ] "<" Utf8-addr-spec ">"
  o  Utf8-addr-spec

        Rewrite both as:
        [ Display-name ] "Internationalized Address " Encoded-word
        " Removed:;"
        where the <Encoded-word> is the original <Utf8-addr-spec>
        encoded according to [RFC2047].

5.1.8.  ENCAPSULATION Downgrading

  If the header field contains non-ASCII characters and is such that no
  rule is given above, encapsulate it in a "Downgraded-" header field
  as described in Section 3.3 as a last resort.

  Applying this procedure to "Received:" header field is prohibited.

5.1.9.  TYPED-ADDRESS Downgrading

  If the header field contains <utf-8-type-addr> and the <utf-8-type-
  addr> contains raw non-ASCII characters, it is in utf-8-address form.
  Convert it to utf-8-addr-xtext form as described in Section 4.2.
  COMMENT downgrading is also performed in this case.  If the address
  type is unrecognized and the header field contains non-ASCII
  characters, then fall back to using ENCAPSULATION downgrading on the
  entire header field.

5.2.  Downgrading Method for Each Header Field

  Header fields are listed in [RFC4021].  This section describes the
  downgrading method for each header field.

  If the whole mail header field does not contain non-ASCII characters,
  email header field downgrading is not required.  Each header field's
  downgrading method is described below.

5.2.1.  Address Header Fields That Contain <address>s

  From:
  Sender:
  To:
  Cc:
  Bcc:



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  Reply-To:
  Resent-From:
  Resent-Sender:
  Resent-To:
  Resent-Cc:
  Resent-Bcc:
  Resent-Reply-To:
  Return-Path:
  Disposition-Notification-To:

  If the header field contains <mailbox> elements that contain non-
  ASCII addresses, preserve the header field in a "Downgraded-" header
  field before the conversion.  Then perform COMMENT downgrading,
  DISPLAY-NAME downgrading, and MAILBOX downgrading.

5.2.2.  Address Header Fields with Typed Addresses

  Original-Recipient:
  Final-Recipient:

  If the header field contains non-ASCII characters, perform TYPED-
  ADDRESS downgrading.

5.2.3.  Downgrading Non-ASCII in Comments

  Date:
  Message-ID:
  Resent-Message-ID:
  In-Reply-To:
  References:
  Resent-Date:
  Resent-Message-ID:
  MIME-Version:
  Content-ID:
  Content-Transfer-Encoding:
  Content-Language:
  Accept-Language:
  Auto-Submitted:

  These header fields do not contain non-ASCII characters except in
  comments.  If the header field contains UTF-8 characters in comments,
  perform COMMENT downgrading.

5.2.4.  Received Header Field

  Received:

  Perform COMMENT downgrading and RECEIVED downgrading.



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5.2.5.  MIME Content Header Fields

  Content-Type:
  Content-Disposition:

  Perform MIME-VALUE downgrading and COMMENT downgrading.

5.2.6.  Non-ASCII in <unstructured>

  Subject:
  Comments:
  Content-Description:

  Perform UNSTRUCTURED downgrading.

5.2.7.  Non-ASCII in <phrase>

  Keywords:

  Perform WORD downgrading.

5.2.8.  Other Header Fields

  For all other header fields that contain non-ASCII characters, are
  user-defined, and are missing from this document or future defined
  header fields, perform ENCAPSULATION downgrading.

  If the software understands the header field's structure and a
  downgrading algorithm other than ENCAPSULATION is applicable, that
  software SHOULD use that algorithm; ENCAPSULATION downgrading is used
  as a last resort.

  Mailing list header fields (those that start in "List-") are part of
  this category.

6.  MIME Body-Part Header Field Downgrading

  MIME body-part header fields may contain non-ASCII characters
  [RFC5335].  This section defines the conversion method to ASCII-only
  header fields for each MIME header field that contains non-ASCII
  characters.  Parse the message body's MIME structure at all levels
  and check each MIME header field to see whether it contains non-ASCII
  characters.  If the header field contains non-ASCII characters in the
  header field value, the header field is a target of the MIME body-
  part header field's downgrading.  Each MIME header field's
  downgrading method is described below.  COMMENT downgrading, MIME-
  VALUE downgrading, and UNSTRUCTURED downgrading are described in
  Section 5.



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  Content-ID:
     The "Content-ID:" header field does not contain non-ASCII
     characters except in comments.  If the header field contains UTF-8
     characters in comments, perform COMMENT downgrading.

  Content-Type:

     Content-Disposition:  Perform MIME-VALUE downgrading and COMMENT
                           downgrading.

     Content-Description:  Perform UNSTRUCTURED downgrading.

7.  Security Considerations

  A downgraded message's header fields contain ASCII characters only.
  But they still contain MIME-encapsulated header fields that contain
  non-ASCII UTF-8 characters.  Furthermore, the body part may contain
  UTF-8 characters.  Implementations parsing Internet messages need to
  accept UTF-8 body parts and UTF-8 header fields that are MIME-
  encoded.  Thus, this document inherits the security considerations of
  MIME-encoded header fields ([RFC2047] and [RFC3629]).

  Rewriting header fields increases the opportunities for undetected
  spoofing by malicious senders.  However, rewritten header fields are
  preserved into Downgraded-* header fields, and parsing Downgraded-*
  header fields enables the detection of spoofing caused by
  downgrading.

  Addresses that do not appear in the message header fields may appear
  in the RCPT commands to an SMTP server for a number of reasons.
  Copying information from the envelope into the header fields risks
  inadvertent information disclosure (see [RFC5321] and Section 4 of
  this document).  Mitigating inadvertent information disclosure is
  also discussed in these locations.

  The techniques described here invalidate methods that depend on
  digital signatures over the envelope or any part of the message,
  which includes the top-level header fields and body-part header
  fields.  Depending on the specific message being downgraded, the
  following techniques are likely to break: DomainKeys Identified Mail
  (DKIM), and possibly S/MIME and Pretty Good Privacy (PGP).  The two
  obvious mitigations are to stick to 7-bit transport when using these
  techniques (as most/all of them presently require) or to make sure to
  have UTF8SMTP end-to-end when needed.

  Many gateways and servers on the Internet will discard header fields
  with which they are not familiar.  To the extent to which the
  downgrade procedures depend on new header fields (e.g.,



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  "Downgraded-") to avoid information loss, the risk of having those
  header fields dropped and subsequent implications must be identified.
  In particular, if the "Downgraded-" header fields are dropped, there
  is no possibility of reconstructing the original information at any
  point (before, during, or after delivery).  Such gateways violate
  [RFC2979] and can be upgraded to correct the problem.

  Even though the information is not lost, the original message cannot
  be perfectly reconstructed because some downgrading methods remove
  information (see Sections 5.1.1 and 5.1.5).  Hence, downgrading is a
  one-way process.

  While information in any email header field should usually be treated
  with some suspicion, current email systems commonly employ various
  mechanisms and protocols to make the information more trustworthy.
  Currently, information in the new Downgraded-* header fields is
  usually not inspected by these mechanisms, and may be even less
  trustworthy than the traditional header fields.  Note that the
  Downgraded-* header fields could have been inserted with malicious
  intent (and with content unrelated to the traditional header fields).

  If an internationalized MUA would simply try to "upgrade" the message
  for display purposes (that is, display the information in the
  Downgraded-* header fields instead of the traditional header fields),
  the effectiveness of the deployed mechanisms and protocols is likely
  to be reduced, and the user may be exposed to additional risks.  More
  guidance on how to display downgraded messages is given in [DISPLAY].

  Concerns about the trustworthiness of the Downgraded-* header fields
  are not limited to displaying and replying in MUAs, and should be
  carefully considered before using such header fields for other
  purposes as well.

  See the "Security Considerations" section in [RFC4952] for more
  discussion.

8.  Implementation Notes

8.1.  RFC 2047 Encoding

  While [RFC2047] has a specific algorithm to deal with whitespace in
  adjacent encoded words, there are a number of deployed
  implementations that fail to implement the algorithm correctly.  As a
  result, whitespace behavior is somewhat unpredictable in practice
  when multiple encoded words are used.  While RFC 5322 states that
  implementations SHOULD limit lines to not more than 78 characters,
  implementations MAY choose to allow overly long encoded words in




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  order to work around faulty [RFC2047] implementations.
  Implementations that choose to do so SHOULD have an optional
  mechanism to limit line length to 78 characters.

8.2.  Trivial Downgrading

  Downgrading is an alternative to avoid the rejection of messages that
  require UTF8SMTP support by a server that does not provide such
  support.  Implementing the full specification of this document is
  desirable, but a partial implementation is also possible.

  If a partial downgrading implementation confronts an unsupported
  downgrading target, the implementation MUST NOT send the message to a
  server that does not support UTF8SMTP.  Instead, it MUST either
  reject the message or generate a notification of non-deliverability.

  A partial downgrading, trivial downgrading, is discussed.  It does
  not support non-ASCII addresses in SMTP envelope and address header
  fields, unknown header field downgrading, or the MIME body-part
  header field downgrading.  It supports:

  o  some simple header field downgrading: Subject
  o  comments and display name downgrading: From, To, Cc
  o  trace header field downgrading: Received

  Otherwise, the downgrading fails.

  Trivial downgrading targets mail messages that are generated by
  UTF8SMTP-aware MUAs and contain non-ASCII characters in comments,
  display names, and unstructured parts without using non-ASCII email
  addresses.  These mail messages usually do not contain non-ASCII
  email addresses in the SMTP envelope and its header fields.  But it
  is not deliverable via a UTF8SMTP-unaware SMTP server.  Implementing
  full specification downgrading may be hard, but trivial downgrading
  saves mail messages without using non-ASCII addresses.

8.3.  7bit Transport Consideration

  The SMTP client may encounter a SMTP server that does not support the
  8BITMIME SMTP extension [RFC1652].  The server does not support
  "8bit" or "binary" data.  Implementers need to consider converting
  "8bit" data to "base64" or "quoted-printable" encoded form and adjust
  the "Content-Transfer-Encoding" header field accordingly.  If the
  body contains multiple MIME parts, this conversion MUST be performed
  for each MIME part.






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9.  IANA Considerations

  IANA has registered the following header fields in the Permanent
  Message Header Field registry, in accordance with the procedures set
  out in [RFC3864].

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Mail-From
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Rcpt-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-From
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Sender
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Cc
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Bcc
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)




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  Header field name:  Downgraded-Reply-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-From
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-Sender
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-Cc
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-Bcc
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Resent-Reply-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Header field name:  Downgraded-Return-Path
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)




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  Header field name:  Downgraded-Disposition-Notification-To
  Applicable protocol:  mail
  Status:  experimental
  Author/change controller:  IETF
  Specification document(s):  This document (Section 3)

  Furthermore, IANA is requested to refuse registration of all field
  names that start with "Downgraded-".  For unknown header fields, use
  the downgrading method described in Section 3.3 to avoid conflicts
  with existing IETF activity (Email Address Internationalization).

10.  Acknowledgements

  Significant comments and suggestions were received from John Klensin,
  Harald Alvestrand, Chris Newman, Randall Gellens, Charles Lindsey,
  Marcos Sanz, Alexey Melnikov, Frank Ellermann, Edward Lewis, S.
  Moonesamy, and JET members.

11.  References

11.1.  Normative References

  [RFC1652]  Klensin, J., Freed, N., Rose, M., Stefferud, E., and D.
             Crocker, "SMTP Service Extension for 8bit-MIMEtransport",
             RFC 1652, July 1994.

  [RFC2045]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
             Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
             Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.

  [RFC2047]  Moore, K., "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions)
             Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text",
             RFC 2047, November 1996.

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

  [RFC2183]  Troost, R., Dorner, S., and K. Moore, "Communicating
             Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The
             Content-Disposition Header Field", RFC 2183, August 1997.

  [RFC2231]  Freed, N. and K. Moore, "MIME Parameter Value and Encoded
             Word Extensions:
             Character Sets, Languages, and Continuations", RFC 2231,
             November 1997.

  [RFC2979]  Freed, N., "Behavior of and Requirements for Internet
             Firewalls", RFC 2979, October 2000.



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  [RFC3461]  Moore, K., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) Service
             Extension for Delivery Status Notifications (DSNs)",
             RFC 3461, January 2003.

  [RFC3629]  Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
             10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.

  [RFC3864]  Klyne, G., Nottingham, M., and J. Mogul, "Registration
             Procedures for Message Header Fields", BCP 90, RFC 3864,
             September 2004.

  [RFC4021]  Klyne, G. and J. Palme, "Registration of Mail and MIME
             Header Fields", RFC 4021, March 2005.

  [RFC4952]  Klensin, J. and Y. Ko, "Overview and Framework for
             Internationalized Email", RFC 4952, July 2007.

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

  [RFC5321]  Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 5321,
             October 2008.

  [RFC5322]  Resnick, P., Ed., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
             October 2008.

  [RFC5335]  Abel, Y., "Internationalized Email Headers", RFC 5335,
             September 2008.

  [RFC5336]  Yao, J. and W. Mao, "SMTP Extension for Internationalized
             Email Addresses", RFC 5336, September 2008.

  [RFC5337]  Newman, C. and A. Melnikov, "Internationalized Delivery
             Status and Disposition Notifications", RFC 5337,
             September 2008.

11.2.  Informative References

  [DISPLAY]  Fujiwara, K., "Displaying Downgraded Messages for Email
             Address Internationalization", Work in Progress,
             March 2009.

  [DSNBIS]   Newman, C. and A. Melnikov, "Internationalized Delivery
             Status and Disposition Notifications", Work in Progress,
             December 2008.






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Appendix A.  Examples

A.1.  Downgrading Example 1

  This appendix shows an SMTP downgrading example.  Consider a mail
  message where:

  o  The sender address is "[email protected]", which is a
     non-ASCII address.  Its ASCII alternative is
     "[email protected]" and its display-name is "DISPLAY-local".

  o  The "To:" address is "[email protected]", which is a
     non-ASCII address.  Its ASCII alternative is
     "[email protected]" and its display-name is "DISPLAY-
     remote1".

  o  The "Cc:" address is a non-ASCII address,
     "[email protected]", without an alternative ASCII
     address.  Its display-name is "DISPLAY-remote2".

  o  Three display names contain non-ASCII characters.

  o  The Subject header field is "NON-ASCII-SUBJECT", which contains
     non-ASCII characters.

  o  Assume the "To:" recipient's MTA (example.net) does not support
     UTF8SMTP.

  o  Assume the "Cc:" recipient's MTA (example.org) supports UTF8SMTP.

  The first example SMTP envelope/message is shown in Figure 1.  In
  this example, the "To:" recipient's session is the focus.



















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  MAIL FROM: <[email protected]>
              [email protected]
  RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
            [email protected]
  RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
  Mime-Version: 1.0
  Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
  Subject: NON-ASCII-SUBJECT
  From: DISPLAY-local <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  To: DISPLAY-remote1 <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  Cc: DISPLAY-remote2 <[email protected]>
  Date: DATE

  MAIL_BODY

             Figure 1: Original envelope/message (example 1)

  In this example, there are two SMTP recipients; one is "To:", the
  other is "Cc:".  The SMTP downgrading uses To: session downgrading.
  Figure 2 shows an SMTP downgraded example.

  MAIL FROM: <[email protected]>
  RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Downgraded-Mail-From: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
   =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
  Downgraded-Rcpt-To: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
   =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
  Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
  Mime-Version: 1.0
  Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
  Subject: NON-ASCII-SUBJECT
  From: DISPLAY-local <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  To: DISPLAY-remote1 <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  Cc: DISPLAY-remote2 <[email protected]>
  Date: DATE

  MAIL_BODY

         Figure 2: SMTP downgraded envelope/message (example 1)



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  After SMTP downgrading, header field downgrading is performed.  The
  final downgraded message is shown in Figure 3.  A Return-Path header
  field will be added by the final destination MTA.

Return-Path: <[email protected]>
Downgraded-Mail-From: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
Downgraded-Rcpt-To: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Subject: =?UTF-8?Q?NON-ASCII-SUBJECT?=
From: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-local?= <[email protected]>
Downgraded-From: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-local_<[email protected]_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
To: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-remote1?= <[email protected]>
Downgraded-To: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-remote1_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_<[email protected]>>?=
Cc: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-remote2?= Internationalized address
[email protected]?= removed:;
Downgraded-Cc: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-remote2_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>?=
Date: DATE

MAIL_BODY

                Figure 3: Downgraded message (example 1)

A.2.  Downgrading Example 2

  In many cases, the sender wants to use a non-ASCII address and the
  recipient is a traditional mail user.  The SMTP server handing mail
  for the recipient and/or the recipient's MUA does not support
  UTF8SMTP extension.  Consider a mail message where:

  o  The sender address is "[email protected]", which is a
     non-ASCII address.  Its ASCII alternative is
     "[email protected]".  It has a display-name "DISPLAY-local",
     which contains non-ASCII characters.

  o  The "To:" address is "[email protected]", which is ASCII-
     only.  It has a display-name, "DISPLAY-remote1", which contains
     non-ASCII characters.

  o  The "Subject:" header field is "NON-ASCII-SUBJECT", which contains
     non-ASCII characters.



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  The second example envelope/message is shown in Figure 4.

  MAIL From: <[email protected]>
              [email protected]
  RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
  Mime-Version: 1.0
  Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
  Subject: NON-ASCII-SUBJECT
  From: DISPLAY-local <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  To: DISPLAY-remote1 <[email protected]>
  Date: DATE

  MAIL_BODY

                 Figure 4: Original message (example 2)

  In this example, SMTP session is downgradable.  Figure 5 shows an
  SMTP downgraded envelope/message.

  MAIL From: <[email protected]>
  RCPT TO: <[email protected]>
  -------------------------------------------------------------
  Downgraded-Mail-From: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
   ?=UTF8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
  Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
  Mime-Version: 1.0
  Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
  Subject: NON-ASCII-SUBJECT
  From: DISPLAY-local <[email protected]
   <[email protected]>>
  To: DISPLAY-remote1 <[email protected]>
  Date: DATE

  MAIL_BODY

         Figure 5: SMTP downgraded envelope/message (example 2)










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  After SMTP downgrading, header field downgrading is performed.  The
  downgraded example is shown in Figure 6.

Return-Path: <[email protected]>
Downgraded-Mail-From: =?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]_?=
=?UTF8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
Message-Id: MESSAGE_ID
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Subject: =?UTF-8?Q?NON-ASCII-SUBJECT?=
Downgraded-From: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-local_<[email protected]_?=
=?UTF-8?Q?<[email protected]>>?=
From: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-local?= <[email protected]>
To: =?UTF-8?Q?DISPLAY-remote1?= <[email protected]>
Date: DATE

MAIL_BODY

                Figure 6: Downgraded message (example 2)

Authors' Addresses

  Kazunori Fujiwara (editor)
  Japan Registry Services Co., Ltd.
  Chiyoda First Bldg. East 13F, 3-8-1 Nishi-Kanda
  Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo  101-0065
  Japan

  Phone: +81 3 5215 8451
  EMail: [email protected]


  Yoshiro Yoneya (editor)
  Japan Registry Services Co., Ltd.
  Chiyoda First Bldg. East 13F, 3-8-1 Nishi-Kanda
  Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo  101-0065
  Japan

  Phone: +81 3 5215 8451
  EMail: [email protected]










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