- From: Maciej Stachowiak <mjs@apple.com>
- Date: Wed, 15 Apr 2009 13:24:07 -0700
On Apr 15, 2009, at 12:13 PM, Anders Rundgren wrote: > Dear list, > I may indeed be biased since I run a private standardization effort > coined KeyGen2 which is designed to replace <keygen>. > Anyway, it might be of some general interest knowing why I have > started this thing. > > Microsoft does not support <keygen>. If I were Microsoft I wouldn't > bother since all CAs have adapted themselves to Microsoft's scheme. > Microsoft's scheme (CertEnroll) is more flexible than <keygen>, > albeit much more complex as well. > > Now to the really problematic stuff: <keygen> is not really an HTML > tag, it is actually 2 phases of a 3-phase key provisioning > protocol. I don't see why a protocol should be plugged into a page > GUI. The alternatives all use APIs or specific plugins that indeed > may be spawned from an HTML page but that's something completely > different. > > Just as a comparison I would like to mention the fact that the > KeyGen2 schema is about 25 times the size of the <keygen> > specification. Although that could indicate a major design error > in KeyGen2, the truth (according to me of course...) is that > <keygen> is way too limited to be used by serious issuers like banks > and governments. > > I would also consider the "market" for <keygen>. For PCs, physical > token distribution is the standard, that's why there has been so > little interest in on-line provisioning. However, for mobile > phones, on-line provisioning is really the only good method unless > you are a government and buy into $200+ solutions like the following: > http://www.trustdigital.com/downloads/TD_EMM_CAC_Pack_101008.pdf > > A difference with mobile phones is that when the phone=token you can > do much cooler things than you can on a PC, including trusted > execution and provisioning. It seems a bit short-sighted to build > on a 15 year old design without at least having investigated what is > possible. > > HTML5 looks great but I think you should stick to page layout and > leave protocols either to JavaScript or to some other extension > mechanism. HTML5 is meant to specify every HTML feature that you need to implement a browser than can handle the real-world Web. At this point, anyone implementing a new browser engine would have to support <keygen>. However, none of this rules out the possibility of putting more advanced crypto functionality into browsers, either via HTML or a separate spec. So I would recommend that you focus on promoting your preferred solution rather than opposing <keygen>. Regards, Maciej -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20090415/708b18ba/attachment.htm>
Received on Wednesday, 15 April 2009 13:24:07 UTC