[ESDS] RE: ESDS Digest, Vol 5, Issue 5

"Philippe Gautier" <philippe.gautier@benedicta.com> Thu, 31 January 2008 10:26 UTC

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Mark,
One additional reason to wider the scope up to "Lifecycle" (VS Supply Chain)
is that DS will, to my opinion, leverage brand new upcoming "pay per use"
economic models based on the capability to store/track/trace every step of
the lifecycle of an object.
Furthermore the question of "property" will also be challenged the same way
but this is mainly philosophical issues for the time being....
;-)
Philippe

-----Message d'origine-----
De : esds-request@ietf.org [mailto:esds-request@ietf.org] 
Envoyé : mardi 29 janvier 2008 15:58
À : esds@ietf.org
Objet : ESDS Digest, Vol 5, Issue 5

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Today's Topics:

   1. Re:  Proposed Charter (Mark Harrison)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2008 14:58:20 +0000
From: Mark Harrison <mark.harrison@cantab.net>
Subject: Re: [ESDS] Proposed Charter
To: Kary Fr?mling <Kary.Framling@hut.fi>
Cc: esds@ietf.org
Message-ID: <87C126A0-573A-4719-8FEC-9A37084910B6@cantab.net>
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Dear Kary, ESDS folks,

Many thanks for your comments!
The E in ESDS is certainly intended to cover both 'extensible' (in the  
technical sense) as well as referring to 'extended' supply chains.

When we said 'which can be used to gather and retrieve complete  
lifecycle information about the object', the intention is of course to  
cover the entire product lifecycle, allowing any organization that is  
involved at any stage in the life of a product to publish links to a  
Discovery Service - or to query it for links to those organizations  
who published a link, subject of course to authentication and  
authorization (governed by fine-grained access control policies set by  
each organization that publishes a link (or event) to a Discovery  
Service), as well as any other access control policies that are set by  
the operator of the Discovery Service or as a result of other  
legislative or regulatory guidelines).

i.e. organizations that interact with Discovery Services potentially  
include (but are not limited to):

designers of products
manufacturers
integrators of composite products
suppliers of components
distributors
wholesalers
companies providing storage
companies providing transport and logistics
retailers
organizations involved with collection, recycling and remanufacturing  
of products
organizations who provide spares, replacement parts and consumables  
(e.g. cartridges, refills etc.)
organizations involved in the maintenance, repair, overhaul and  
servicing of products
industry bodies and regulators
insurance companies
customs officials

In some situations, end-consumers may be provided with some access  
(subject to access control policies determined by the manufacturers,  
supply chain members or by legislation) - although it is unlikely that  
many organizations would provide Discovery Service records that are  
open to anonymous access.  Within a retail store, a retailer might  
provide product information kiosks, which provide the public with  
information that is gathered using Discovery Services - but in some  
cases, this will have been pre-cached by the retailer (using the  
retailer's own credentials) in order to make it available to anonymous  
customers within their store.

Other public access might be provided to traceability service, via a  
secure web page, which requires the customer to provide the serial  
number of the product - or some other details, such as a code that is  
printed on their receipt of purchase.  Such a web-based traceability  
service may (behind the scenes) interact with Discovery Services and  
other information services, such as EPC Information Services - and  
present a consolidated view of lifecycle traceability information to  
the customer.  However, like the example of an information kiosk  
within a retail store, the end-consumer is provided with information,  
mediated by an authorized supply chain player, such as the product  
manufacturer or the retailer.

In the two above examples, there is no need for a Discovery Service to  
hold a record (or link information) about which consumer brought a  
product - or enquired about a product in-store.   Both mechanisms  
described could allow the customer to remain anonymous.

Many thanks for your input!

Best regards,

- Mark


On 29 Jan 2008, at 12:51, Kary Frdmling wrote:

> Dear group,
>
> Just a quick comment about the charter text. It says "which can be  
> used to gather and retrieve complete lifecycle information about the  
> object" but apparently the definition of "object lifecycle" only  
> covers the design and manufacturing phases (i.e. the supply chain)  
> of the object.
>
> As I have been working on the PROMISE project (http://www.promise-plm.com/

> ) for the last years, my understanding of "object lifecycle" also  
> includes the usage phase (including consumers, not only airlines or  
> similar "commercial" or "industrial" end-user organisations) and the  
> "end-of-life", i.e. recycling.
>
> This difference is fundamental for the work group charter. The scope  
> becomes much broader and the technical challenges are greater if the  
> PROMISE-kind interpretation is used. But the vision also becomes  
> more interesting, i.e. a "true" Internet of Things.
>
> I personally vote for the PROMISE-kind interpretation but no matter  
> which interpretation is used, it should be clearly expressed in the  
> charter.
>
> Another thing: if consumers are included in the vision, then  
> "privacy" also becomes a part of security. "Privacy" might sound  
> unattractive but anonymization and pseudonymization solutions are  
> used for tackling this in many systems already.
>
> Regards,
>
>  Kary Frdmling
> ---
> Mail: Helsinki University of Technology, P.O. Box 5500, FI-02015  
> HUT, Finland
> Office: TUAS Building, Room 2044, Otaniementie 17, Espoo
> Phone: +358 50 5980451, Telefax: +358 9 451 3293
> Email: Kary.Framling@hut.fi, WWW: http://www.cs.hut.fi/~framling
>
>> Dear ESDS group,
>>
>> Below is the proposed charter and work items for our work group.  
>> Please review and comment.
>>
>> Extensible Supply-chain Discovery Service (ESDS)
>> =====================================
>>
>> Chair(s):
>>   Mark Harrison <mark.harrison at cantab.net>
>> Applications Area Director(s):
>>   Lisa Dusseault <lisa at osafoundation.org>
>>   Chris Newman <chris.newman at sun.com>
>> Applications Area Advisor:
>>   Lisa Dusseault <lisa at osafoundation.org>
>> Mailing List(s):
>>   esds at ietf.org
>> General information about the mailing list is at:
>>   https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/esds
>>
>> Purpose of Working Group:
>> -----------------------------------
>> The use of Supply chain Tracking Systems is rising at an  
>> unprecedented rate, particularly as various industry sectors are  
>> increasingly adopting automatic identification technologies such as  
>> Radio-Frequency Identification (RFID) to automatically track  
>> individual physical objects as they move through a supply chain.   
>> Rather than tracking at batch or lot level, the ultimate goal of  
>> this technology is that each individual physical object will have  
>> its own unique ID, which can be used to gather and retrieve  
>> complete lifecycle information about the object, which is  
>> fragmented across the supply chain. Deployment of these systems has  
>> grown to a point where they can no longer operate effectively in  
>> isolation from other systems.  There is a need to share data among  
>> these disparate systems, which are owned and operated by separate  
>> organizations.
>>
>> ESDS has been chartered to architect and define the protocol of a  
>> Discovery Service for global supply chains. ESDS's goal is to  
>> enable searching for information on physical objects flowing in a  
>> supply chain, by authorized and authenticated users.  Economic and  
>> technical factors dictate that Discovery Services and their  
>> protocol ESDS must be designed for deployment on the Internet.  
>> Access control, data protection and security are of utmost  
>> importance, due to sensitivity and value of the information  
>> generated by the supply chain.
>>
>> Goals and Milestones:
>> ----------------------------
>> The work group will address to the following work items:
>>
>> 1) Define common vocabulary and terminology
>> 2) Define core data sets for sharing on Discovery Service,  
>> including required data fields, optional data fields, and  
>> extensible data fields (e.g. who, what, when, where, why, links,  
>> identifier, lifecycle, class, etc.)
>> 3) Define fault tolerance for missing required data fields
>> 4) Define mechanism for uniquely identifying objects in a supply  
>> chain without requiring a global unique identifier for each and all  
>> objects that enter a supply chain
>> 5) Define handling for time zones (e.g. accepting only UTC  
>> timestamps vs. accepting timestamps with any timezone)
>> 6) Define a protocol for advertising/publishing data resources  
>> (Resource Discovery)
>> 7) Define a protocol and policy for retracting or voiding published  
>> data
>> 8) Define a protocol for querying published data, facilitating both  
>> one-time queries and standing queries (e.g. pull vs. push queries)
>> 9) Define a common interface for access control configuration (e.g.  
>> supply chain, partner, user, roles)
>> 10) Define security architecture and mechanisms for authorization,  
>> authentication , encryption (e.g.
>> integrating security certificates into the protocol vs. relying on  
>> a security layer such as SSL)
>> 11) Architect a bootstrapping policy for objects while ensuring  
>> security and confidentiality
>> 12) Define a common configuration interface for each category of  
>> policies (e.g. access policies, retention policies, archiving  
>> policies, purging  policies, audit policies, QoS policies,  
>> propagation policies)
>> 13) Define policies for updating stale and broken links (e.g. for  
>> records with a long retention period, it is vital that links can be  
>> updated, when required)
>> 14) Validate that the deployment architecture is independent,  
>> scalable and robust
>> 15) Determine how aggregation and disaggregation events should be  
>> handled including policies for access control and visibility of  
>> these events (e.g. a pallet is broken down into boxes and each box  
>> has its own destination supply chain)
>> 16) Determine if multilayer information visibility is required  
>> (e.g. a query with limited access can be informed of the existence  
>> of information for a particular object, but to view the actual  
>> information, full access privileges would be required. This has  
>> particular implications for peer-to-peer searching across multiple  
>> Discovery Services)
>> 17) Define a peer-to-peer protocol to enable linking Discovery  
>> Service servers together
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
>
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