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RFC3323 A Privacy Mechanism for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)


RFC3323   A Privacy Mechanism for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)    J. Peterson [ November 2002 ] ( TXT = 54116 bytes)

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Network Working Group                                        J. Peterson
Request for Comments: 3323                                       Neustar
Category: Standards Track                                  November 2002


     A Privacy Mechanism for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)

Status of this Memo

   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

   This document defines new mechanisms for the Session Initiation
   Protocol (SIP) in support of privacy.  Specifically, guidelines are
   provided for the creation of messages that do not divulge personal
   identity information.  A new "privacy service" logical role for
   intermediaries is defined to answer some privacy requirements that
   user agents cannot satisfy themselves.  Finally, means are presented
   by which a user can request particular functions from a privacy
   service.

Table of Contents

   1.      Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
   2.      Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   3.      Varieties of Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
   3.1     When is Privacy Necessary? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
   3.2     User-Provided Privacy  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
   3.3     Network-Provided Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
   4.      User Agent Behavior  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
   4.1     Constructing Private Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
   4.1.1   URIs, Display-Names and Privacy  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
   4.1.1.1 Display-Names  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
   4.1.1.2 URI Usernames  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
   4.1.1.3 URI Hostnames and IP Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
   4.2     Expressing Privacy Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
   4.3     Routing Requests to Privacy Services . . . . . . . . . . . 12
   4.4     Routing Responses to Privacy Services  . . . . . . . . . . 13
   5.      Privacy Service Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14



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   5.1     Header Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
   5.2     Session Privacy  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
   5.3     Applying User-Level Privacy Functions. . . . . . . . . . . 18
   6.      Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
   7.      IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
           Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
           Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
           Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
           Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
           Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

1.  Introduction

   This document provides privacy requirements and mechanisms for the
   Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).

   Privacy is defined in this document as the withholding of the
   identity of a person (and related personal information) from one or
   more parties in an exchange of communications, specifically a SIP
   dialog.  These parties potentially include the intended
   destination(s) of messages and/or any intermediaries handling these
   messages.  As identity is defined in this document, withholding the
   identity of a user will, among other things, render the other parties
   in the dialog unable to send new SIP requests to the user outside of
   the context of the current dialog.

   In SIP, identity is most commonly carried in the form of a SIP URI
   and an optional display-name.  A SIP address-of-record has a form
   similar to an email address with a SIP URI scheme (for example,
   sip:alice@atlanta.com).  A display-name is a string containing a name
   for the identified user (for example, "Alice").  SIP identities of
   this form commonly appear in the To and From header fields of SIP
   requests and responses.  A user may have many identities that they
   use in different contexts.

   There are numerous other places in SIP messages in which identity-
   related information can be revealed.  For example, the Contact header
   field contains a SIP URI, one that is commonly as revealing as the
   address-of-record in the From.  In some headers, the originating user
   agent can conceal identity information as a matter of local policy
   without affecting the operation of the SIP protocol.  However,
   certain headers are used in the routing of subsequent messages in a
   dialog, and must therefore be populated with functional data.








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   The privacy problem is further complicated by proxy servers (also
   referred to in this document as "intermediaries" or "the network")
   that add headers of their own, such as the Record-Route and Via
   headers.  Information in these headers could inadvertently reveal
   something about the originator of a message; for example, a Via
   header might reveal the service provider through whom the user sends
   requests, which might in turn strongly hint at the user's identity to
   some recipients.  For these reasons, the participation of
   intermediaries is also crucial to providing privacy in SIP.

   Two complimentary principles have guided the design of this privacy
   mechanism: Users are empowered to hide their identity and related
   personal information when they issue requests, but intermediaries and
   designated recipients of requests are entitled to reject requests
   whose originator cannot be identified.

   The privacy properties of only those specific headers enumerated in
   the core SIP specification ([1]), as opposed to headers defined by
   any existing or planned extension, are discussed in this document -
   however, the privacy mechanisms described in this document can be
   extended to support extensions.

   There are other aspects of the general privacy problem for SIP that
   are not addressed by this document.  Most significantly, the
   mechanisms for managing the confidentiality of SIP headers and
   bodies, as well the security of session traffic, are not reconsidered
   here.  These problems are sufficiently well addressed in the baseline
   SIP specification and related documents, and that no new mechanisms
   are required.

   This document begins with a section that provides a general framework
   and architecture for privacy in SIP (Section 3), followed by sections
   that detail user agent behavior (Section 4) and privacy service
   behavior (Section 5).

2. Terminology

   In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
   "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT
   RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as
   described in BCP 14, RFC 2119 [2] and indicate requirement levels for
   compliant SIP implementations.









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3. Varieties of Privacy

   A user may possess many identities that are used in various contexts;
   generally, identities are addresses-of-record which are bound to
   particular registrars (operated by the administrators of a domain)
   with whom SIP user agents register.  The operators of these domains
   may be employers, service providers, or unaffiliated users
   themselves.

   When a user voluntarily asserts an identity in a request, they are
   claiming that they can receive requests sent to that identity in that
   domain.  Strictly speaking, privacy entails the restriction of the
   distribution of a specific identity and related personal information
   from some particular party or parties that are potentially recipients
   of the message.  In particular, there are scenarios in which a party
   desiring anonymity may:

      send a message and withhold an identity from the final
      destination(s) while still communicating an identity to one or
      more intermediaries

      send a message and withhold their identity from some or all
      intermediaries, but still communicate an identity end-to-end to
      the final destination(s)

      withhold identity from both intermediaries and final
      destination(s)

   The result of withholding an identity is that the parties in question
   would be unable, for example, to attempt to initiate a new dialog
   with the anonymous party at a later time.  However, the anonymous
   party still must be capable of receiving responses and new requests
   during the dialog in which it is participating.

   It may be desirable to restrict identity information on both requests
   and responses.  Initially, it might seem unusual to suggest that a
   response has privacy concerns - presumably, the originator of the
   request knows who they were attempting to contact, so the identity of
   the respondent can hardly be confidential.  However, some personal
   information in responses (such as the contact address at which the
   respondent is currently registered) is subject to privacy concerns
   and can be addressed by these mechanisms.









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3.1 When is Privacy Necessary?

   Users may wish for identity information to be withheld from a given
   party for any number of reasons, for example:

      Users might want to contact a particular party without revealing
      their identity in order to impart information with which they
      would not like to be associated

      Users might fear that the exposure of their identity or personal
      information to some networks or destinations will make them a
      target for unsolicited advertising, legal censure or other
      undesirable consequences

      Users might want to withhold from participants in a session the
      identity by which they are known to network intermediaries for the
      purposes of billing and accounting

   When a user agent decides to send a request through a proxy server,
   it may be difficult for the originator to anticipate the final
   destination of that message.  For that reason, users are advised not
   to base their estimation of their privacy needs on where they expect
   a message will go.  For example, if a user sends a request to
   telephone number, they may believe that the final destination of the
   request will be a station in the public switched telephone network
   (PSTN) that is unable to inspect, say, SIP Contact headers, and
   therefore assume that it is safe to leave such headers in the clear;
   however, such a request might very well end up being retargeted by
   the network to a native SIP endpoint to which Contact headers are
   quite legible.

   This document describes three degrees of privacy - one level of
   user-provided privacy, and two levels of network-provided privacy
   (header privacy and session privacy).  How much privacy does a user
   need for any given session? Generally, if a user is seeking privacy,
   they're going to need as much of it as they can get.  However, if a
   user knows of no privacy service, they must be content with user-
   provided privacy alone.  Similarly, if a user knows of an
   anonymization service that can provide session privacy, but is unable
   to secure session traffic to prevent the anonymizer from possibly
   eavesdropping on the session, they might judge the loss of session
   privacy to be the lesser evil.  The user might also be aware of
   exceptional conditions about the architecture in which the user agent
   is deployed that may obviate one or more privacy concerns.







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   A user may not always be the best judge of when privacy is required
   even under ideal circumstances, and thus privacy may in some
   architectures by applied by intermediaries without the user's
   explicit per-message request.  By sending a request through
   intermediaries that can provide a privacy role, the user tacitly
   permits privacy functions to be invoked as needed.

   It is also important that users understand that intermediaries may be
   unable to provide privacy functions requested by users.  Requests for
   privacy may not be honored due to legal constraints, unimplemented or
   misconfigured features, or other exceptional conditions.

   Note that just as it is the prerogative of a user to conceal their
   identity, so it must also be the prerogative of proxy servers and
   other users to refuse to process requests from users whom they cannot
   identify.  Therefore users should not just automatically withhold
   their identity for all requests and responses - inability to
   ascertain the identity of the originator of the request will
   frequently be grounds for rejection.  Privacy should only be
   requested when the user has a need for it.

   Further to this point, withholding some information in signaling
   might not be necessary for all user agents to ensure privacy.  For
   example, user agents may acquire their IP addresses and hostnames
   dynamically, and these dynamic addresses may not reveal any
   information about the user whatsoever.  In these cases, restricting
   access to hostnames (as described in Section 4.1.1.3) is unnecessary.

3.2 User-Provided Privacy

   There is a certain amount of privacy that a user agent can provide
   itself.  For example, the baseline SIP specification permits a user
   agent to populate the From header field of a request with an
   anonymous value.  Users can take similar steps to avoid revealing any
   other unnecessarily identity information in related SIP headers (this
   is discussed further in Section 4.1.1).

   A user may have different privacy needs for a message if it traverses
   intermediaries rather than going directly end-to-end.  A user may
   attempt to conceal things from intermediaries which are not concealed
   from the final destination, and vice versa.  For example, using
   baseline SIP mechanisms, a user agent can encrypt SIP bodies end-to-
   end in order to prevent intermediaries from inspecting them. If a SIP
   message will not pass through intermediaries, however, this step
   might not be necessary (i.e., lower-layer security, without the
   addition of security for SIP bodies, could be sufficient).





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   Also note that if a dialog goes directly end-to-end between
   participants, however, it will not be possible to conceal the network
   addresses of the participants.

3.3 Network-Provided Privacy

   If a user is sending a request through intermediaries, a user agent
   can conceal its identity to only a limited extent without the
   intermediaries' cooperation.  Also, some information can only be
   concealed from destination endpoints if an intermediary is entrusted
   to remove it.

   For these reasons a user must have a way to request privacy from
   intermediaries, a means that allows users both to signal some
   indications of the desired privacy services, and to ensure that their
   call is routed to an intermediary that is capable of providing these
   services.  A user may be aware of a specific third-party anonymizing
   host, one with which they have a pre-existing relationship, or a user
   may request that their local administrative domain provide privacy
   services.

   Intermediaries may also be empowered to apply privacy to a message
   without any explicit signaling from the originating user, since user
   agents may not always be cognizant or capable of requesting privacy
   when it is necessary.

4. User Agent Behavior

   There are three different ways that a user agent can contribute to
   the privacy of a request - by populating headers with values that
   reflect privacy requirements, by requesting further privacy services
   from the network, and by using cryptographic confidentiality to
   secure headers and bodies.  Note that the last of these is outside
   the scope of this document.

   The mechanisms provided in this section assume that a user agent is
   sufficiently configurable that a user can select header values and
   provision privacy preferences (ideally on a per-call basis).  If this
   isn't the case, it is possible that a user can route their call
   through a privacy service that is configured to groom signaling from
   this user agent in order to provide some of the function described
   below (see Section 5).









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4.1 Constructing Private Messages

   Privacy starts with the user agent.  The bulk of the steps that are
   required to conceal private information about the sender of a message
   are, appropriately enough, the sender's responsibility.

   The following SIP headers, when generated by a user agent, can
   directly or indirectly reveal identity information about the
   originator of a message: From, Contact, Reply-To, Via, Call-Info,
   User-Agent, Organization, Server, Subject, Call-ID, In-Reply-To and
   Warning.  Note that the use of an authentication system (such as the
   SIP Digest authentication method described in [1]) also usually
   entails revealing identity to one or more parties; for more
   information see Section 6.

   The first and most obvious step is that user agents SHOULD not
   include any optional headers that might divulge personal information;
   there's certainly no reason for a user seeking privacy to include a
   Call-Info.  Secondly, the user SHOULD populate URIs throughout the
   message in accordance with the guidelines given in Section 4.1.1.
   For example, users SHOULD create an anonymous From header field for
   the request.  Finally, users MAY also need to request certain privacy
   functions from the network, as described in Section 4.2.

   The Call-ID header, which is frequently constructed in a manner that
   reveals the IP address or hostname of the originating client,
   requires special mention.  User agents SHOULD substitute for the IP
   address or hostname that is frequently appended to the Call-ID value
   a suitably long random value (the value used as the 'tag' for the
   From header of the request might even be reused).

   Note that if the user wants to conceal any of the above headers from
   intermediaries alone, without withholding them from the final
   destination of the message, users MAY also place legitimate values
   for these headers in encapsulated 'message/sip' S/MIME bodies as
   described in Section 23 of [1].

4.1.1 URIs, Display-Names and Privacy

   A certain amount of privacy can be afforded by choosing to populate
   SIP headers with URIs and display-names that do not reveal any
   identity information.  In some of the header fields (for example, the
   Reply-To and From headers), URIs are not used in further signaling
   within the current dialog.  In others, like the Contact header, an
   inaccurate URI will result in a failure to route subsequent requests
   within the dialog.





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4.1.1.1 Display-Names

   It is a relatively common practice in email and other applications to
   use an assumed name in the display-name component of the From header
   field.  Outside of a business context (especially in applications
   such as instant messaging or Internet gaming) the use of such aliases
   is unlikely to provide a cause for distrust.

   It is RECOMMENDED that user agents seeking anonymity use a display-
   name of "Anonymous".

4.1.1.2 URI Usernames

   The structure of a URI itself can reveal or conceal a considerable
   amount of personal information.  Consider the difference between:

   sip:jon.peterson@neustar.biz

   and

   sip:a0017@anonymous-sip.com

   From the former, the full name and employer of the party in question
   can easily be guessed.  From the latter, you learn nothing other than
   that the party desires anonymity.  In some cases, sufficient
   anonymity can be achieved by selecting an oblique URI.  Today, the
   SIP specification recommends a URI with "anonymous" in the user
   portion of the From header.

   In some URIs, such as those that appear in Contact headers, it MAY
   also make sense to omit the username altogether, and provide only a
   hostname, like:  sip:anonymous-sip.com

4.1.1.3 URI Hostnames and IP Addresses

   It is assumed by this document that the user that requests privacy
   wishes to receive future requests and responses within this dialog,
   but does not wish to reveal an identity that could be used to send
   new requests to him outside the scope of this dialog.  For that
   reason, different treatment must be recommended for URIs that are
   used in the context of routing further requests in the dialog, as
   opposed to routing new requests outside the context of the dialog.

   For headers indicating how the user would like to be contacted for
   future sessions (such as the From header), it might not immediately
   be obvious why changing the hostname would be necessary - if the
   username is 'anonymous', requests will not be routable to the
   anonymous user.



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   Sometimes, merely changing the username will not be enough to conceal
   a user's identity.  A user's SIP service provider might decisively
   reveal a user's identity (if it reflected something like a small
   company or a personal domain).  So in this case, even though the URI
   in the From header would not dereference  to the anonymous user,
   humans might easily guess the user's identity and know the proper
   form of their address-of-record.

   For these reasons, the hostname value 'anonymous.invalid' SHOULD be
   used for anonymous URIs (see [3] for more information about the
   reserved 'invalid' DNS TLD).  The full recommended form of the From
   header for anonymity is (note that this From header, like all others,
   MUST contain a valid and unique 'tag=' parameter):

   From: "Anonymous" <sip:anonymous@anonymous.invalid>;tag=1928301774

   For headers indicating how further requests in the current dialog
   should be routed (namely the Contact header, Via header, and session
   information in the SDP), there seems to be little that a user can do
   to disguise the existing URI, because users MUST provide a value that
   will allow them to receive further requests.  In some cases,
   disguising or failing to provide the username, as described above,
   may create some level of privacy, but the hostname provides a more
   significant obstacle.

   Is there much additional privacy in using an IP address rather than a
   hostname? It does prevent someone who casually inspects a message
   from gathering information that they might see otherwise.  However,
   reverse-resolving such addresses is generally trivial, and
   substituting an IP address for a hostname could introduce some
   complications, for example due to NAT and firewall traversal
   concerns.  Headers used in routing may also rely on certain DNS
   practices to provide services that would be lost if an IP address is
   used in place of a hostname.

   This document thus recommends that the host portion of URIs that are
   used in the routing of subsequent requests, such as URIs appearing in
   the Contact header, SHOULD NOT be altered by the user agent due to
   privacy considerations.  If these headers require anonymization, the
   user requests that service from an intermediary, namely a privacy
   service.

   Note that many of the considerations regarding the Contact header
   above apply equal well to SIP headers in which a hostname, rather
   than a URI, is used for some routing purpose (namely the Via header).






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4.2 Expressing Privacy Preferences

   There are some headers that a user agent cannot conceal itself,
   because they are used in routing, that could be concealed by an
   intermediary that subsequently takes responsibility for directing
   messages to and from the anonymous user.  The user agent must have
   some way to request such privacy services from the network.  For that
   purpose, this document defines a new SIP header, Privacy, that can be
   used to specify privacy handling for requests and responses.

   Privacy-hdr  =  "Privacy" HCOLON priv-value *(";" priv-value)
   priv-value   =   "header" / "session" / "user" / "none" / "critical"
                    / token

   User agents SHOULD include a Privacy header when network-provided
   privacy (as described in Section 3.3) is required.  Note that some
   intermediaries may also add the Privacy header to messages, including
   privacy services.  However, such intermediaries SHOULD only do so if
   they are operating at a user's behest, for example if a user has an
   administrative arrangement with the operator of the intermediary that
   it will add such a Privacy header.  An intermediary MUST NOT modify
   the Privacy header in any way if the 'none' priv-value is already
   specified.

   The values of priv-value today are restricted to the above options,
   although further options can be defined as appropriate (see Section
   7).  Each legitimate priv-value can appear zero or one times in a
   Privacy header.  The current values are:

      header: The user requests that a privacy service obscure those
      headers which cannot be completely expunged of identifying
      information without the assistance of intermediaries (such as Via
      and Contact).  Also, no unnecessary headers should be added by the
      service that might reveal personal information about the
      originator of the request.

      session: The user requests that a privacy service provide
      anonymization for the session(s) (described, for example, in a
      Session Description Protocol [5] body) initiated by this message.
      This will mask the IP address from which the session traffic would
      ordinarily appear to originate.  When session privacy is
      requested, user agents MUST NOT encrypt SDP bodies in messages.
      Note that requesting session privacy in the absence of any end-
      to-end session encryption raises some serious security concerns
      (see Section 5.2).






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      user: This privacy level is usually set only by intermediaries, in
      order to communicate that user level privacy functions (as
      discussed in Section 5.3) must be provided by the network,
      presumably because the user agent is unable to provide them. User
      agents MAY however set this privacy level for REGISTER requests,
      but SHOULD NOT set 'user' level privacy for other requests.

      none: The user requests that a privacy service apply no privacy
      functions to this message, regardless of any pre-provisioned
      profile for the user or default behavior of the service.  User
      agents can specify this option when they are forced to route a
      message through a privacy service which will, if no Privacy header
      is present, apply some privacy functions which the user does not
      desire for this message.  Intermediaries MUST NOT remove or alter
      a Privacy header whose priv-value is 'none'.  User agents MUST NOT
      populate any other priv-values (including 'critical') in a Privacy
      header that contains a value of 'none'.

      critical: The user asserts that the privacy services requested for
      this message are critical, and that therefore, if these privacy
      services cannot be provided by the network, this request should be
      rejected.  Criticality cannot be managed appropriately for
      responses.

   When a Privacy header is constructed, it MUST consist of either the
   value 'none', or one or more of the values 'user', 'header' and
   'session' (each of which MUST appear at most once) which MAY in turn
   be followed by the 'critical' indicator.

   The following table specifies extensions to Table 2 in [1].

   Header field          where   proxy ACK BYE CAN INV OPT REG
   ___________________________________________________________
   Privacy                        amrd  o   o   o   o   o   o

   Header field                        SUB NOT PRK IFO UPD MSG
   ___________________________________________________________
   Privacy                              o   o   o   o   o   o

4.3 Routing Requests to Privacy Services

   The most obvious way for a user agent to invoke the privacy function
   is to direct a request through an intermediary known to act as a
   privacy service.  Doing so traditionally entails the configuration of
   pre-loaded Route headers that designate the privacy service.






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   It is RECOMMENDED that service providers couple the privacy service
   function with a local outbound proxy.  Users can thereby send their
   messages that request privacy through their usual outbound route.
   Users should not assume, however, that the administrative domain that
   is the destination of the request would be willing and able to
   perform the privacy service function on their behalf.  If the
   originating user wishes to keep their local administrative domain a
   secret, then they must use a third-party anonymization service
   outside of any of the principal administrative domains associated
   with the session.

   It is highly RECOMMENDED that user agents use network or transport
   layer security, such as TLS, when contacting a privacy service.
   Ideally, users SHOULD establish a direct (i.e., single pre-loaded
   Route header) connection to a privacy service; this will both allow
   the user to inspect a certificate presented by the privacy service,
   and it will provide confidentiality for requests that will reduce the
   chances that the information that the privacy service will obscures
   is revealed before a message arrives at the privacy service.  By
   establishing a direct connection to a privacy service, the user also
   eliminates the possibility that intermediaries could remove requests
   for privacy.  If a direct connection is impossible, users SHOULD use
   a mechanism like SIPS to guarantee the use of lower-layer security
   all the way to the privacy service.

   If a user agent believes that it is sending a request directly to a
   privacy service, it SHOULD include a Proxy-Require header containing
   a new option-tag, 'privacy', especially when the 'critical' priv-
   value is present in the Privacy header.  That way, in the unlikely
   event that the user agent sends a request to an intermediary that
   does not support the extensions described in this document, the
   request will fail.  Note that because of special privacy service

   behavior (described in Section 5), no subsequent intermediaries in
   the signaling path of the request will also need to the support the
   'privacy' option-tag - once the privacy service has fulfilled all the
   required privacy functions, the 'privacy' option-tag is removed from
   the Proxy-Require header.

4.4 Routing Responses to Privacy Services

   Making sure that responses will go through a privacy service is a
   little bit trickier.  The path traversed by SIP responses is the same
   as the path over which the request traveled.  Thus, the responding
   user agent, for example, cannot force a privacy service to be
   injected in the response path after it has received a request.





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   What a responding user agent can do, however, is ensure that the path
   by which requests reach them traverses their privacy service.  In
   some architectures, the privacy service function will be fulfilled by
   the same server to which requests for the local administrative domain
   are sent, and hence it will automatically be in the path of incoming
   requests.  However, if this is not the case, the user will have to
   ensure that requests are directed through a third-party privacy
   service.

   One way to accomplish this is to procure an 'anonymous callback' URI
   from the third-party service and to distribute this as an address-
   of-record.  A privacy service provider might offer these anonymous
   callback URIs to users in the same way that an ordinary SIP service
   provider grants addresses-of-record. The user would then register
   their normal address-of-record as a contact address with the third-
   party service.

   Alternatively, a user agent could send REGISTER requests through a
   privacy service with a request for 'user' level privacy.  This will
   allow the privacy service to insert anonymous Contact header URIs.
   Requests sent to the user's conventional address-of-record would then
   reach the user's devices without revealing any usable contact
   addresses.

   Finally, a user might generate a CPL ([7]) script that will direct
   requests to an anonymization service.

   Users are also advised to use transport or network layer security in
   the response path.  This may involve registering a SIPS URI and/or
   maintaining persistent TLS connections over which their user agent
   receives requests.

   Privacy services MAY in turn route requests through other privacy
   services.  This may be necessary if a privacy service does not
   support a particular privacy function, but it knows of a peer that
   does.  Privacy services may also cluster themselves into networks
   that exchange session traffic between one another in order to further
   disguise the participants in a session, although no specific
   architecture or method for doing so is described in this document.

5. Privacy Service Behavior

   This document defines a new SIP logical role called a "privacy
   service".  The privacy service role is instantiated by a network
   intermediary, frequently by entities that can act as SIP proxy
   servers.  The function of a privacy service is to supply privacy
   functions for SIP messages that cannot be provided by user agents
   themselves.



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   When a message arrives at a server that can act as a privacy service,
   the service SHOULD evaluate the level of privacy requested in a
   Privacy header.  Usually, only the services explicitly requested
   should be applied.  However, privacy services MAY have some means
   outside SIP of ascertaining the preferences of the user (such as a
   pre-arranged user profile) and therefore they MAY perform such other
   privacy functions without an explicit Privacy header.  Performing
   even a user-level privacy function in a privacy service could be
   useful, for example, when a user is sending messages from a legacy
   client that does support the Privacy header, or a user agent that
   does not allow the user to configure the values of headers that could
   reveal personal information.  However, if the Privacy header value of
   'none' is specified in a message, privacy services MUST NOT perform
   any privacy function and MUST NOT remove or modify the Privacy
   header.

   Privacy services MUST implement support for the 'none' and 'critical'
   privacy tokens, and MAY implement any of other privacy levels
   described in Section 4.2 as well as any extensions that are not
   detailed in this document.  In some cases, the privacy service will
   not be capable of fulfilling the requested level of privacy. If the
   'critical' privacy level is present in the Privacy header of a
   request, then if the privacy service is incapable of performing all
   of the levels of privacy specified in the Privacy header then it MUST
   fail the request with a 500 (Server Error) response code.  The reason
   phrase of the status line of the response SHOULD contain appropriate
   text indicating that there has been a privacy failure as well as an
   enumeration of the priv-value(s) which were not supported by the
   privacy service (the reason phrase SHOULD also respect any Accept-
   Language header in the request if possible).

   When a privacy service performs one of the functions corresponding to
   a privacy level listed in the Privacy header, it SHOULD remove the
   corresponding priv-value from the Privacy header - otherwise, any
   other privacy service involved with routing this message might
   unnecessarily apply the same function, which in many cases would be
   undesirable.  When the last priv-value (not counting 'critical') has
   been removed from the Privacy header, the entire Privacy header MUST
   be removed from a message.

   When the privacy service removes the entire Privacy header, if the
   message is a request, the privacy service MUST also remove any
   'privacy' option-tag from the Proxy-Require header field of the
   request.







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5.1 Header Privacy

   If a privacy level of 'header' is requested, then the originating
   user has asked the privacy service to help to obscure headers that
   might otherwise reveal information about the originator of the
   request.  However, the values that have been so obscured must be
   recoverable when further messages in the dialog need to be routed to
   the originating user agent.  In order to provide these functions the
   privacy service must frequently act as a transparent back-to-back
   user agent (B2BUA).

   Firstly, a request for header privacy entails that the server SHOULD
   NOT add any headers to the message that reveal any identity or
   personal information, including the following: Call-Info, Server, and
   Organization.  All of these provide optional information that could
   reveal facts about the user that has request anonymity.

   Privacy services operating on requests SHOULD remove all Via headers
   that have been added to the request prior to its arrival at the
   privacy service (a practice referred to as "Via stripping") and then
   SHOULD add a single Via header representing themselves.  Note that
   the bottommost such Via header field value in a request contains an
   IP address or hostname that designates the originating client, and
   subsequent Via header field values may indicate hosts in the same
   administrative domain as the client.  No Via stripping is required
   when handling responses.

   Contact headers are added by user agents to both requests and
   responses.  A privacy service SHOULD replace the value of the Contact
   header in a message with a URI that does not dereference to the
   originator of the message (such as the anonymous URI described in
   Section 4.1.1.3).  The URI that replaces the existing Contact header
   field value MUST dereference to the privacy service.

   In a manner similar to Via stripping, a privacy service SHOULD also
   strip any Record-Route headers that have been added to a request
   before it reaches the privacy service - though note that no such
   headers will be present if there is only one hop between the
   originating user agent and the privacy service, as is recommended
   above.  Such Record-Route headers might also divulge information
   about the administrative domain of the client.

   For the purposes of this document, it is assumed that the privacy
   service has locally persisted the values of any of the above headers
   that are so removed, which requires the privacy service to keep a
   pretty significant amount of state on a per-dialog basis.  When
   further requests or responses associated with the dialog reach the
   privacy service, it MUST restore values for the Via, Record-



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   Route/Route or Contact headers that it has previously removed in the
   interests of privacy.  There may be alternative ways (outside the
   scope of this document) to perform this function that do not require
   keeping state in the privacy service (usually means that involve
   encrypting and persisting the values in the signaling somehow).

   The following procedures are RECOMMENDED for handling the Record-
   Route header field of requests and responses, which provides
   specialchallenges to a privacy service:

   When a privacy service is processing (on behalf of the originator) a
   request that contains one or more Record-Route header field values,
   the privacy service must strip these values from the request and
   remember both the dialog identifiers and the ordered Record-Route
   header field values.  As described above, it must also replace the
   Contact header field with a URI indicating itself.  When a response
   with the same dialog identifiers arrives at the privacy service, the
   privacy service must reapply any Record-Route header field values to
   the response in the same order, and it must then add a URI
   representing itself to the Record-Route header field of the response.
   If the response contains Record-Route header field values of its own,
   these must also be included (in order) in the Record-Route header
   field after the URI representing the privacy service.

   Note that when a privacy service is handling a request and providing
   privacy on behalf of the destination of the request, providing
   privacy for Record-Route headers downstream of the privacy service is
   significantly more complicated.  This document recommends no way of
   statefully restoring those headers if they are stripped.

5.2 Session Privacy

   If a privacy level of 'session' is requested, then the user has
   requested that the privacy service anonymize the session traffic
   (e.g., for SIP telephony calls, the audio media) associated with this
   dialog.

   The SIP specification dictates that intermediaries such as proxy
   servers cannot inspect and modify message bodies.  The privacy
   service logical role MUST therefore act as a back-to-back user agent
   in order to provide media privacy, effectively terminating and re-
   originating the messages that initiate a session (although in support
   of session privacy the privacy service does not need to alter headers
   characterizing the originator or destination when the request is re-
   originated).  In order to introduce an anonymizer for session
   traffic, the privacy service needs to control a middlebox [8] that
   can provide an apparent source and sink for session traffic.  The
   details of the implementation of an anonymizer, and the modifications



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   that must be made to the Session Description Protocol (SDP [5])
   bodies in the messages that initiate a session are outside the scope
   of this document.

   The risk, of course, of using such an anonymizer is that the
   anonymizer itself is party to your communications.  For that reason,
   requesting session-level privacy without resort to some sort of end-
   to-end security for the session traffic (with RTP [6] media, for
   example, SRTP [4]) is NOT RECOMMENDED.

5.3 Applying User-Level Privacy Functions at a Privacy Service

   If a privacy level of 'user' is requested, then the originating user
   has requested that privacy services perform the user-level privacy
   functions described in Section 4.1.

   Note that the privacy service MUST remove any non-essential
   informational headers that have been added by the user agent,
   including the Subject, Call-Info, Organization, User-Agent, Reply-To
   and In-Reply-To.

   Significantly, user-level privacy could entail the modification of
   the From header, changing it from its original value to an anonymous
   value.  Prior to the current issue of the SIP specification, the
   modification of the values of the To and From headers by
   intermediaries was not permitted, and would result in improper dialog
   matching by the endpoints.  Currently, dialog matching uses only the
   tags in the To and From headers, rather than the whole header fields.
   Thus, under the new rules the URI values in the To and From headers
   themselves could be altered by intermediaries.  However, some legacy
   clients might consider it an error condition if the value of the URI
   in the From header altered between the request and the response.

   Also, performing user-level privacy functions MAY entail the
   modification of the Call-ID header, since the Call-ID commonly
   contains a hostname or IP address corresponding to the originating
   client.  This field is essential to dialog matching, and it cannot be
   altered by intermediaries.

   Therefore, any time that a privacy service needs to modify any
   dialog-matching headers for privacy reasons, it SHOULD act as a
   transparent back-to-back user agent, and it MUST persist the former
   values of the dialog-matching headers.  These values MUST be restored
   in any messages that are sent to the originating user agent.







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6. Security Considerations

   Messages that request privacy require confidentiality and integrity.
   Without integrity, the requested privacy functions could be
   downgraded or eliminated, potentially exposing identity information.
   Without confidentiality, eavesdroppers on the network (or any
   intermediaries between the user and the privacy service) could see
   the very personal information that the user has asked the privacy
   service to obscure.

   All of the network-provided privacy functions in this document entail
   a good deal of trust for the privacy service.  Users should only
   trust privacy services that are somehow accountable to them.

   Operators of privacy services should be aware that in the eyes of
   downstream entities, a privacy service will be the only source to
   which anonymous messages can be traced.

   Note that authentication mechanisms, including the Digest
   authentication method described in the SIP specification, are outside
   the scope of the privacy considerations in this document.  Revealing
   identity through authentication is highly selective, and may not
   result in the compromise of any private information.  Obviously,
   users that do not wish to reveal their identity to servers that issue
   authentication challenges MAY elect not to respond to such
   challenges.

7. IANA Considerations

   This document defines a new SIP header field called "Privacy" that
   allows a user agent to request a certain degree of privacy for a
   message.  This behavior associated with this header is specified in
   Section 4.2.  This header has been added to the header sub-registry
   under http://www.iana.org/assignments/sip-parameters.

    Header name: Privacy
   Compact form: none defined

   This document also creates an IANA registry for values that populate
   the Privacy header.  This registry should be indexed by priv-value
   tokens and should contain a short semantic description of the new
   value.  The current values of the "Privacy" header are as follows:

   o  user: Request that privacy services provide a user-level privacy
      function

   o  header: Request that privacy services modify headers that cannot
      be set arbitrarily by the user (Contact/Via).



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   o  session: Request that privacy services provide privacy for session
      media

   o  none: Privacy services must not perform any privacy function

   o  critical: Privacy service must perform the specified services or
      fail the request

   New values for the "Privacy" header can only be defined by IETF
   Consensus including RFC publication (RFC 2434).  IANA registration
   for the "Privacy" header field values is required along with the RFC
   publication.

   Authors of extensions to the SIP protocol that expose personal
   information about the participants in sessions are advised against
   extending the "Privacy" header - rather, it is preferable to create
   new identity mechanisms whose privacy can be managed by the user
   agent without the agency of intermediaries.

   This document also defines a new SIP option-tag, 'privacy', that
   represents support for the extension defined in this document.

Normative References

   [1]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M. and E. Schooler, "SIP:
        Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, June 2002.

   [2]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to indicate requirement
        levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [3]  Eastlake, D. and A. Panitz, "Reserved Top Level DNS Names", RFC
        2606, June 1999.

Informative References

   [4]  Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Oran, D., Blom, R., Carrara, E.,
        Naslund, M. and K. Normann, "The Secure Real Time Transport
        Protocol", Work in Progress.

   [5]  Handley, M. and V. Jacobson, "SDP: Session Description
        Protocol", RFC 2327, April 1998.









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   [6]  Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R. and V. Jacobson,
        "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", RFC
        1889, January 1996.

   [7]  Lennox, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "CPL: A Language for User Control
        of Internet Telephony Services", Work in Progress

   [8]  Srisuresh, P., Kuthan, J., Rosenberg, J., Molitor, A. and A.
        Rayhan, "Middlebox communication architecture and framework",
        RFC 3303, August 2002.

Author's Address

   Jon Peterson
   NeuStar, Inc.
   1800 Sutter St
   Suite 570
   Concord, CA  94520 US

   Phone: +1 925/363-8720
   EMail: jon.peterson@neustar.biz
   URI:   http://www.neustar.biz/

Acknowledgments

   The author would like to thank Allison Mankin, Rohan Mahy, Eric
   Rescorla, Mark Watson, Cullen Jennings, Robert Sparks, Jonathan
   Rosenberg, Ben Campbell, Tom Gray and John Elwell for their comments.























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Full Copyright Statement

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
   English.

   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
   Internet Society.



















Peterson                    Standards Track                    [Page 22]




 
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