- From: =JeffH <Jeff.Hodges@KingsMountain.com>
- Date: Thu, 24 Nov 2016 18:00:32 -0800
- To: Emily Stark <estark@google.com>
- Cc: IETF HTTP WG <ietf-http-wg@w3.org>
Emily wrote:
> I anticipate Expect-CT to be useful more than a year and less than 5
> years. Within 1-2 years, I expect/hope several browsers will be
> requiring CT for all new certificates. They can still implement
> Expect-CT to protect sites against backdating and against
> certificates that were issued before the date that they started
> requiring CT for all new certs.
ok, by "they" you mean UAs, yes?
> Once a browser is requiring CT for *all* certificates (e.g. because
> the maximum validity period has elapsed beyond the date that the
> browser began requiring CT for all new certs), then I don't think
> Expect-CT is useful for that browser anymore.
by implication you mean "useful" for a server (aka "relying party" (RP))
and user, yes?
because what we are protecting here is not so much the browser (vendor)
but the RP and user, yes?
I could see Expect-CT to be useful for the longer term if it were to
signal additional RP-desired selective UA behavior such as "no user
recourse", *if* the browsers were not going to implement such behavior,
e.g., as a a matter of course in the case of errors during secure
connection establishment.
=JeffH
> On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 4:47 PM, =JeffH
> <Jeff.Hodges@kingsmountain.com> wrote:
> WRT "Expect-CT"
> <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-stark-expect-ct>
> (aka "the I-D" in the below)...
>
> Is the expect-ct policy intended to be used long-term by servers?
>
> I.e., is this server-declared expect-ct policy only a stop-gap until
> all browsers natively enforce their vendors' "ct policies"?
>
> At first glance, it seems the answer is "yes, expect-ct has long-term
> usefulness" given the language in
> <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-stark-expect-ct-00#section-2.1.2>,
>
> i.e., a host's declaration of expect-ct policy is stating that the UA
> must terminate any connection to that host (and port?) that does not
> satisfy the UA's ct policy.
>
> However, given this..
>
> On Sunday, November 13, 2016 at 4:47 AM, Emily Stark wrote:
>> That is, eventually, when browsers require CT for all
>> certificates, [...] I see Expect-CT as a way that individual sites
>> can opt in to the future early ("the future" being when browsers
>> require CT for all certificates)
>
> ..it sounds like the browsers intend to do that in any case, and if
> so, on what timescale?
>
> I.e., is it worthwhile to go through all the work to formally define
> Expect-CT in an RFC?
>
> I'm not sure. This is part of the reason why I uploaded this as an
> experimental draft. I'm not 100% sure what's the right process or
> venue is for a mechanism that is not meant to stick around forever.
>
>
> Though, if there is some functionality that a server-declared
> expect-ct policy stipulates that is not intended to be implemented by
> default in near- to intermediate-term, then formally specifying
> Expect-CT perhaps has a reasonable cost-benefit regardless. Or also
> if explicit server-declared "expect-ct" policy would be useful to the
> long-tail of HTTPS clients other than the dominant browsers.
>
> Perhaps one should consider having the expect-ct policy additionally
> mean that there is "no user recourse" to connection termination as a
> result of CT-policy violation. I note the I-D does not presently
> state that.
>
> See <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6797#section-12.1> for how this
> is discussed in HSTS. You might consider adding "no user recourse" to
> a "UA implementation advice" section.
>
> That seems reasonable to include, though I don't think "no user
> recourse" is enough benefit to justify keeping Expect-CT around after
> it has otherwise exhausted its usefulness.
>
>
> Though, like any of this (including HSTS), the browsers could in the
> future decide that they will have a "no user recourse" policy by
> default for all secure transport establishment failures. It's a
> question of how far in the future might that occur (in order to
> justify present-to-intermediate-term work).
>
> HTH,
>
> =JeffH
>
>
>
Received on Friday, 25 November 2016 02:01:32 UTC