Network Working Group | E. Osterweil |
Internet-Draft | Verisign Labs |
Intended status: Informational | S. Rose |
Expires: February 27, 2015 | D. Montgomery |
NIST | |
August 26, 2014 |
Enterprise Requirements for Secure Email Key Management
draft-osterweil-dane-ent-email-reqs-00
Individuals and organizations have expressed a wish to have the ability to send encrypted and/or digitally signed email end-to-end. One key obstacle to end-to-end email security is the difficulty in discovering, obtaining, and validating email credentials across administrative domains. This document addresses foreseeable adoption obstacles for DANE's cryptographic key management for email in enterprises, and outlines requirements.
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The management of security protections for email constituencies can vary by organization and by type of organization. Some organizations can have large sets of users with prescribed controls and policies, some may have a lot of churn in their users, and there are many other ways in which deployments may differ.
As a result of the variability of deployments, aligning key management semantics with the behaviors of email users (and their organizations) can be an important differentiator when administrators choose a solution in which to invest. Designs and cryptographic protocols that do not fit the requirements of users run the risk that deployments may falter and/or may not gain traction.
This document addresses foreseeable requirements for DANE's cryptographic key management for email in enterprises, and outlines requirements. This document generally categorizes requirements as being relevant to the domain authorities, the Relying Parties (RPs), or both. In the following text, "domain authorities" refers to the owners of a given domain, which may not necessarily be the operators of the authoritative DNS servers for the zone(s) that make up the domain.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
TBD
This document only discusses requirements for publishing and querying for security credentials used in email. No new IANA actions are required in this document, but specifications addressing these requirements may have IANA required actions.
This section should be removed in final publication.
The motivation for this document is to outline requirements needed to facilitate the secure publication and learning of cryptographic keys for email, using DANE semantics. There are numerous documents that more generally address security considerations for email. By contrast, this document is not proposing a protocol or any facilities that need to be secured. Instead, these requirements are intended to inform security considerations in follow-on works.
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |