Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

Henning Schulzrinne <Henning.Schulzrinne@fcc.gov> Thu, 11 June 2015 18:05 UTC

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From: Henning Schulzrinne <Henning.Schulzrinne@fcc.gov>
To: "philippe.fouquart@orange.com" <philippe.fouquart@orange.com>, "cnit@ietf.org" <cnit@ietf.org>
Thread-Topic: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..
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Date: Thu, 11 Jun 2015 18:05:14 +0000
References: <D19F23AD.26CEA%richard@shockey.us>, <E42CCDDA6722744CB241677169E8365603614617@MISOUT7MSGUSRDB.ITServices.sbc.com>, <9588_1434045613_5579CCAD_9588_574_1_fki5dyxdmgyv92b6hugpfuoy.1434045608655@email.android.com>
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Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..
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>From my reading, the function seems similar to caller name delivery, even if the mechanism is not a CNAM database.

According to Google Translate:

Presented coordinates are those listed in the directories. These are necessarily the coordinates of the line holder that are displayed. The name of the calling line holder is displayed only if the call is presented on a compatible device.

________________________________
From: cnit [cnit-bounces@ietf.org] on behalf of philippe.fouquart@orange.com [philippe.fouquart@orange.com]
Sent: Thursday, June 11, 2015 2:00 PM
To: DOLLY, MARTIN C; Richard Shockey; cnit@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

The feature I was referring to
http://assistance.orange.fr/presentation-du-nom-de-la-ligne-fixe-utilisation-4010.php
(In French, with my apologies)
As I said, it isn't a CNAM service.

Regards,

Philippe Fouquart
Orange Labs Networks
+33 (0) 1 45 29 58 13


-------- Message d'origine --------
De : "DOLLY, MARTIN C"
Date :11/06/2015 18:18 (GMT+01:00)
À : Richard Shockey , FOUQUART Philippe IMT/OLN , cnit@ietf.org
Objet : RE: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

I got a different answer from the Orange/FT folks at the CT WG meetings…..so please check and clarify….

From: cnit [mailto:cnit-bounces@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Richard Shockey
Sent: Thursday, June 11, 2015 11:46 AM
To: philippe.fouquart@orange.com; cnit@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..


Thank you that is very helpful. I’m assuming its network delivered based on information derived from the calling party billing data.

My other running assumption has been that some form Advanced Calling Name Delivery is a precondition for advanced realtime communications service delivery.. Aka ubiquitous video calling.   Would that be a reasonable presumption?

From: <philippe.fouquart@orange.com<mailto:philippe.fouquart@orange.com>>
Date: Thursday, June 11, 2015 at 9:02 AM
To: "cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>" <cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

Richard,

For a number of years, there has been an optional caller name dispay feature attached to some of the telephone services in France, but indeed nothing like the standalone CNAM service concept that underpins the discussions on this list.

Regards,

Philippe Fouquart
Orange Labs Networks
+33 (0) 1 45 29 58 13

-------- Message d'origine --------
De : Richard Shockey
Date :11/06/2015 05:21 (GMT+01:00)
À : Brian Rosen , Henning Schulzrinne
Cc : cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>
Objet : Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..



Here is what I want to know now.

Before we start to process this concept I want to know how relevant the existing CNAM service is deployed outside North America.

I’m told by reliable sources that the CNAM service is not deployed anywhere among the major telecom markets in Europe or Asia. Not Japan China or South Korea UK Italy France and in fact it might actually be illegal under the strict privacy regulations in Germany.

I don’t know.

That said our friends at Apple seem to understand there is a problem here. I have tried to engage the most senior management at Google about who would be responsible for defining how the VoLTE CUA could actually display an advanced call display data and frankly no one knows.

http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-update-in-ios9-suggests-caller-id-2015-6

There is a realistic question if this is simply a North American specific problem why is this  a IETF issue. You might ask the same question of MODERN but I frankly don’t want to go there.




From: Richard Shockey <richard@shockey.us<mailto:richard@shockey.us>>
Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 12:35 PM
To: Brian Rosen <br@brianrosen.net<mailto:br@brianrosen.net>>
Cc: <cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..


Hopefully but I still haven’t seen any response to my concern about normative dependencies on STIR.

If we can define the object/headers first then I don’t have a issue.

—
Richard Shockey
Shockey Consulting LLC
Chairman of the Board SIP Forum
www.shockey.us<http://www.shockey.us>
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PSTN +1 703-593-2683


From: Brian Rosen <br@brianrosen.net<mailto:br@brianrosen.net>>
Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 12:26 PM
To: Richard Shockey <richard@shockey.us<mailto:richard@shockey.us>>
Cc: Eric Burger <eburger@standardstrack.com<mailto:eburger@standardstrack.com>>, <cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

Are we planning to submit a charter in the next couple of days, and then see if we can get a slot at the next IETF?

Brian
On May 28, 2015, at 1:55 PM, Richard Shockey <richard@shockey.us<mailto:richard@shockey.us>> wrote:


A fair argument but I don’t want to spend 5 years waiting for a series of normative dependencies on the trust model before actually understanding what headers can/should be used here.


Its much too difficult to get things done in the IETF as it is.   I’d much prefer building from success starting with the definition of the data object then ..then folding that into a trust model and frankly given what we have seen in STIR I’m not sure your argument holds up. Again the MARTINI model.

Didn’t you recently  say something about “perfection is the enemy of the good”  :-)



From: Eric Burger <eburger@standardstrack.com<mailto:eburger@standardstrack.com>>
Date: Wednesday, May 27, 2015 at 10:11 PM
To: <cnit@ietf.org<mailto:cnit@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [cnit] CNIT Charter bashing..

On May 25, 2015, at 5:31 PM, Richard Shockey <richard@shockey.us<mailto:richard@shockey.us>> wrote:

From: Mary Barnes <mary.ietf.barnes@gmail.com<mailto:mary.ietf.barnes@gmail.com>>
Date: Friday, May 22, 2015 at 12:58 PM
Attached is what I have at this point. Really, the only thing I'm struggling with is the milestones as I don't think we can request publication of the data object and headers without having defined the trust model.


RS> Mary I’m not sure about that statement. I can certainly anticipate several deployment models where the trust mechanism (aka signing) does not need to be formally integrated in the solution especially those where the exchange of data is more bi-lateral and the trust mechanism is at lower layers of the stack than the signaling. My initial concern  is what is the header and what is the data object(s) carried in the header. How the CNIT data is created should not be our concern.

I do not buy it. If there are private agreements between service providers, they have private agreements. They can do whatever they want.

Last I looked, this is the Internet Engineering Task Force. Assume untrusted transport across the wide open Internet, and trust no endpoint that cannot cryptographically prove who they are. If it happens two service providers exchange CNIT data over a single, yellow cable, then it is a benefit that no state-sponsored security service can listen in on the cable.

I do not want to take three years to build a protocol and two more years after that for products to be available just to have a system that only works in walled gardens. I do not want to be the person that has to explain to the media why Calling Name Delivery is just as broken as it always was and it will be another five years before the world sees a real solution.

Let us get this right the first time.
[snip]
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