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Internet Society © 1992–2017 Internet Standards and how to get involved What’s Happening at the IETF? Kevin Meynell Content & Resource Manager [email protected] 26 November 2016 Presentation title – Client name 1

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Internet Society © 1992–2017

Internet Standards and how to get involvedWhat’s Happening at the IETF?

Kevin MeynellContent & Resource [email protected]

26 November 2016

Presentation title – Client name 1

Disclaimer

Two important points:

No-one really speaks for the IETF

I am speaking about the IETF as an individual participant

https://trac.tools.ietf.org/group/iesg/trac/wiki/SpeakingForIetf

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Mission of the IETF

Make the Internet work better by producing

high quality, relevant technical documents

that influence the way people

design, use, and manage the Internet

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The Internet is a global community

— First meeting in 1986

—Large open international community of network engineers, operators, vendors and researchers concerned with development and smooth operation of the Internet

—Volunteers participate on an individual basis to develop and refine protocols that are useful to operators, manufacturers and vendors utilising the Internet who support the work of the IETF

— Produce open standards known as Request for Comments (RFCs)

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IETF Standards make the Internet work

TCP/IP

— IPv4 (RFC791) and IPv6 (RFC2460…)

—TCP (RFC675…) and UDP (RFC768)

E-Mail

— SMTP (RFC5321), IMAP (RFC3501)

Network and Routing

—BGP (RFC4271), OSPF (RFC2178…), MPLS (RFC3031)

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DNS

—DNS (RFCs 1034, 1035…)

—DNSSEC (RFCs 4033, 4034 & 4035)

—DANE (RFCs 6698, 7671…)

Web

—HTTP (RFC2616…)

Security

—TLS (RFCs 5246 & 6176)

The Internet Engineering Task Force

— http://www.ietf.org/

—Anyone can participate in the mailing lists and discussions

—Anyone can submit a ‘draft’ document(known as an Internet Draft or I-D)

—Working Groups debate and discuss drafts

—Documents progress through the standards process to become RFCs

— Primary venue for all communication is e-mail

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Working Groups and Areas

— 134 Working Groups

– Each working group has 2 or 3 Co-Chairs

—Working Groups have a Charter that defines:

– Purpose– Deliverables– Timeframe

—Working Groups are created, re-chartered and concluded

—Activities organized into 7 Areas

– Each area has 2 or 3 Area Directors (ADs)7

IETF Areas - http://www.ietf.org/iesg/area.html

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• Application protocols and architectures• Real-time (and non-real-time) communicationApplications and Real-Time (ART)

• Mechanisms related to data transport on the Internet• Congestion controlTransport (TSV)

• Routing and signalling protocolsRouting(RTG)

• IPv4/IPv6, DNS, DHCP, VPNs, mobilityInternet(INT)

• Network management• Operations: IPv6, DNS, security, routingOperations and Management (OPS)

• Security protocols and mechanisms, including cryptographySecurity(SEC)

• Activities focused on supporting and updating IETF processesGeneral(GEN)

Working Groups - by Area

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ART, 40

GEN, 1INT, 19

OPS, 17

RTG, 25

SEC, 19

TSV, 13

IETF Meetings

—Three times each year

—Move around the world to different locations

—Continuation of discussions on e-mail lists

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IETF 97: 13-18 November 2016, Seoul, South Korea

— http://www.ietf.org/meeting/97/

— 1,042 on-site participants from 52 countries

— Just 3 from Pakistan!

— IETF 97 Hackathon (12-13 November 2016)

Held to encourage developers to discuss, collaborate and develop utilities, ideas, sample code and solutions that show practical implementations of IETF standards

— ISOC posts about IETF 97 at:

– https://www.internetsociety.org/deploy360/blog/tag/ietf97/– https://www.internetsociety.org/rough-guide-ietf97/

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Next Meeting: IETF 98

— 26-31 March 2017, Chicago, United States

https://www.ietf.org/meeting/98/

—Remote participation available:

– Audio streams

– Web conferencing systems

– Jabber chat rooms

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IETF Fellowship Programme

Fellowships available to enable people to attend IETF meetings

http://www.internetsociety.org/what-we-do/education-and-leadership-programmes/ietf-and-ois-programmes/internet-society-fellowship

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IETF Policy Programme

Fellowships available for regulators to attend IETF meetings and learn about IETF standards and processes

https://www.internetsociety.org/what-we-do/education-and-leadership-programmes/ietf-and-ois-programmes/internet-society-fellowship-5

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IPv6 Activities

— IPv6 now common across most working groups

— Some key groups:

– IPv6 Operations (v6ops) WG – provides operational guidance on deploying and operating IPv6 in new and existing networks.

– IPv6 Maintenance (6man) WG – upkeep and advancement of IPv6 protocol specifications and addressing architecture.

– Home Networking (homenet) WG – developing networking protocols for small residential networks.

– Sunsetting IPv4 (sunset4) WG – discusses transition of IPv4 to IPv6 with view to deprecating IPv4.

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DNS/DNSSEC Activities

—DNS Operations (dnsop) WG – provides operational guidance on DNS software and services, administration of DNS zones, and DNSSEC.

—DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (dane) WG - developing mechanisms and techniques to allow establishment of cryptographically secured communications using information in the DNS.

—DNS PRIVate Exchange (DPRIVE) WG – developing mechanisms to provide confidentiality to DNS transactions using TLS and/or DTLS.

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Routing Activities

— Secure Inter-Domain Routing (sidr) WG – improving the security of the routing infrastructure through the RPKI and BGPSEC specifications

— SIDR Operations (sidrops) WG – developing operation guidance on deploying and operating SIDR in new and existing networks.

—Global Routing Operations (grow) WG – considers the operational problems with the IPv4 and IPv6 global routing systems,including route leaks.

— Inter-Domain Routing Working Group (idr) WG – improving the robustness and scalability of BGP by IPv4 and IPv6.

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Trust, Identity and Privacy Activities

—Transport Layer Security (tls) WG – developing a cryptographic protocol to provide privacy and data integrity between communicating computer applications.

—Using TLS in Applications (uta) WG - developing definitions for using TLS with application protocols, best practices for clients and servers, and guidance for developers.

—Automated Certificate Management Environment (acme) WG – developing REST-based specifications for automating digital certificate issuance, validation, revocation and renewal. The basis of the Let’s Encrypt service.

—Public Notary Transparency (trans) WG – developing mechanisms to allowing detection of mis-issued certificates.

—CURves, Deprecating and a Little more Encryption (curves) WG – developing new cryptographic security, including new algorithms for DNSSEC and SSH.

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Summary

—The IETF makes the Internet work better

— It has a fundamental role in Internet administration

— It has international scope, but local relevance

— It has an open, inclusive and well-established structure

—Your participation is critical to the success of the IETF

—More information:

http://www.ietf.org/newcomers.html

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Visit us atwww.internetsociety.orgFollow us@internetsociety

Galerie Jean-Malbuisson 15, CH-1204 Geneva, Switzerland.+41 22 807 1444

1775 Wiehle Avenue, Suite 201, Reston, VA 20190-5108 USA. +1 703 439 2120

Thank you.

http://www.internetsociety.org/deploy360/

[email protected]

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