draft-ietf-rtcweb-security-arch-10

[フレーム]

RTCWEB E. Rescorla
Internet-Draft RTFM, Inc.
Intended status: Standards Track July 4, 2014
Expires: January 5, 2015
 WebRTC Security Architecture
 draft-ietf-rtcweb-security-arch-10
Abstract
 The Real-Time Communications on the Web (RTCWEB) working group is
 tasked with standardizing protocols for enabling real-time
 communications within user-agents using web technologies (commonly
 called "WebRTC"). This document defines the security architecture
 for WebRTC.
Status of this Memo
 This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
 provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
 Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
 Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
 working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
 Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
 Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
 and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
 time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
 material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
 This Internet-Draft will expire on January 5, 2015.
Copyright Notice
 Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors. All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document. Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.
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 This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
 Contributions published or made publicly available before November
 10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
 material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
 modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
 Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
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Table of Contents
 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
 2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3. Trust Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3.1. Authenticated Entities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 3.2. Unauthenticated Entities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 4. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 4.1. Initial Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
 4.2. Media Consent Verification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
 4.3. DTLS Handshake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
 4.4. Communications and Consent Freshness . . . . . . . . . . . 12
 5. Detailed Technical Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 5.1. Origin and Web Security Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 5.2. Device Permissions Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 5.3. Communications Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
 5.4. IP Location Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
 5.5. Communications Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 5.6. Web-Based Peer Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 5.6.1. Trust Relationships: IdPs, APs, and RPs . . . . . . . 19
 5.6.2. Overview of Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
 5.6.3. Items for Standardization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 5.6.4. Binding Identity Assertions to JSEP Offer/Answer
 Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 5.6.4.1. Input to Assertion Generation Process . . . . . . 22
 5.6.4.2. Carrying Identity Assertions . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 5.6.4.3. a=identity Attribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 5.6.5. IdP Interaction Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 5.6.5.1. General Message Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 5.6.5.2. Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
 5.6.5.3. IdP Proxy Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
 5.6.5.4. Verifying Assertions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
 6. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
 6.1. Communications Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
 6.2. Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
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 6.3. Denial of Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
 6.4. IdP Authentication Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
 6.4.1. PeerConnection Origin Check . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
 6.4.2. IdP Well-known URI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
 6.4.3. Privacy of IdP-generated identities and the
 hosting site . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
 6.4.4. Security of Third-Party IdPs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 6.4.5. Web Security Feature Interactions . . . . . . . . . . 36
 6.4.5.1. Popup Blocking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 6.4.5.2. Third Party Cookies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 7. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 8. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 9. Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 9.1. Changes since -06 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 9.2. Changes since -05 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 9.3. Changes since -03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 9.4. Changes since -03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 9.5. Changes since -02 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
 Appendix A. Example IdP Bindings to Specific Protocols . . . . . 41
 A.1. BrowserID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
 A.2. OAuth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
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1. Introduction
 The Real-Time Communications on the Web (WebRTC) working group is
 tasked with standardizing protocols for real-time communications
 between Web browsers. The major use cases for WebRTC technology are
 real-time audio and/or video calls, Web conferencing, and direct data
 transfer. Unlike most conventional real-time systems, (e.g., SIP-
 based[RFC3261] soft phones) WebRTC communications are directly
 controlled by some Web server, via a JavaScript (JS) API as shown in
 Figure 1.
 +----------------+
 | |
 | Web Server |
 | |
 +----------------+
 ^ ^
 / \
 HTTP / \ HTTP
 / \
 / \
 v v
 JS API JS API
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 | | Media | |
 | Browser |<---------->| Browser |
 | | | |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 Figure 1: A simple WebRTC system
 A more complicated system might allow for interdomain calling, as
 shown in Figure 2. The protocol to be used between the domains is
 not standardized by WebRTC, but given the installed base and the form
 of the WebRTC API is likely to be something SDP-based like SIP.
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 +--------------+ +--------------+
 | | SIP,XMPP,...| |
 | Web Server |<----------->| Web Server |
 | | | |
 +--------------+ +--------------+
 ^ ^
 | |
 HTTP | | HTTP
 | |
 v v
 JS API JS API
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 | | Media | |
 | Browser |<---------------->| Browser |
 | | | |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 Figure 2: A multidomain WebRTC system
 This system presents a number of new security challenges, which are
 analyzed in [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-security]. This document describes a
 security architecture for WebRTC which addresses the threats and
 requirements described in that document.
2. Terminology
 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].
3. Trust Model
 The basic assumption of this architecture is that network resources
 exist in a hierarchy of trust, rooted in the browser, which serves as
 the user's TRUSTED COMPUTING BASE (TCB). Any security property which
 the user wishes to have enforced must be ultimately guaranteed by the
 browser (or transitively by some property the browser verifies).
 Conversely, if the browser is compromised, then no security
 guarantees are possible. Note that there are cases (e.g., Internet
 kiosks) where the user can't really trust the browser that much. In
 these cases, the level of security provided is limited by how much
 they trust the browser.
 Optimally, we would not rely on trust in any entities other than the
 browser. However, this is unfortunately not possible if we wish to
 have a functional system. Other network elements fall into two
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 categories: those which can be authenticated by the browser and thus
 are partly trusted--though to the minimum extent necessary--and those
 which cannot be authenticated and thus are untrusted.
3.1. Authenticated Entities
 There are two major classes of authenticated entities in the system:
 o Calling services: Web sites whose origin we can verify (optimally
 via HTTPS, but in some cases because we are on a topologically
 restricted network, such as behind a firewall, and can infer
 authentication from firewall behavior).
 o Other users: WebRTC peers whose origin we can verify
 cryptographically (optimally via DTLS-SRTP).
 Note that merely being authenticated does not make these entities
 trusted. For instance, just because we can verify that
 https://www.evil.org/ is owned by Dr. Evil does not mean that we can
 trust Dr. Evil to access our camera and microphone. However, it
 gives the user an opportunity to determine whether he wishes to trust
 Dr. Evil or not; after all, if he desires to contact Dr. Evil
 (perhaps to arrange for ransom payment), it's safe to temporarily
 give him access to the camera and microphone for the purpose of the
 call, but he doesn't want Dr. Evil to be able to access his camera
 and microphone other than during the call. The point here is that we
 must first identify other elements before we can determine whether
 and how much to trust them. Additionally, sometimes we need to
 identify the communicating peer before we know what policies to
 apply.
 It's also worth noting that there are settings where authentication
 is non-cryptographic, such as other machines behind a firewall.
 Naturally, the level of trust one can have in identities verified in
 this way depends on how strong the topology enforcement is.
3.2. Unauthenticated Entities
 Other than the above entities, we are not generally able to identify
 other network elements, thus we cannot trust them. This does not
 mean that it is not possible to have any interaction with them, but
 it means that we must assume that they will behave maliciously and
 design a system which is secure even if they do so.
4. Overview
 This section describes a typical RTCWeb session and shows how the
 various security elements interact and what guarantees are provided
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 to the user. The example in this section is a "best case" scenario
 in which we provide the maximal amount of user authentication and
 media privacy with the minimal level of trust in the calling service.
 Simpler versions with lower levels of security are also possible and
 are noted in the text where applicable. It's also important to
 recognize the tension between security (or performance) and privacy.
 The example shown here is aimed towards settings where we are more
 concerned about secure calling than about privacy, but as we shall
 see, there are settings where one might wish to make different
 tradeoffs--this architecture is still compatible with those settings.
 For the purposes of this example, we assume the topology shown in the
 figures below. This topology is derived from the topology shown in
 Figure 1, but separates Alice and Bob's identities from the process
 of signaling. Specifically, Alice and Bob have relationships with
 some Identity Provider (IdP) that supports a protocol such as OpenID
 or BrowserID) that can be used to demonstrate their identity to other
 parties. For instance, Alice might have an account with a social
 network which she can then use to authenticate to other web sites
 without explicitly having an account with those sites; this is a
 fairly conventional pattern on the Web. Section 5.6.1 provides an
 overview of Identity Providers and the relevant terminology. Alice
 and Bob might have relationships with different IdPs as well.
 This separation of identity provision and signaling isn't
 particularly important in "closed world" cases where Alice and Bob
 are users on the same social network and have identities based on
 that domain (Figure 3) However, there are important settings where
 that is not the case, such as federation (calls from one domain to
 another; Figure 4) and calling on untrusted sites, such as where two
 users who have a relationship via a given social network want to call
 each other on another, untrusted, site, such as a poker site.
 Note that the servers themselves are also authenticated by an
 external identity service, the SSL/TLS certificate infrastructure
 (not shown). As is conventional in the Web, all identities are
 ultimately rooted in that system. For instance, when an IdP makes an
 identity assertion, the Relying Party consuming that assertion is
 able to verify because it is able to connect to the IdP via HTTPS.
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 +----------------+
 | |
 | Signaling |
 | Server |
 | |
 +----------------+
 ^ ^
 / \
 HTTPS / \ HTTPS
 / \
 / \
 v v
 JS API JS API
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 | | Media | |
 Alice | Browser |<---------->| Browser | Bob
 | | (DTLS+SRTP)| |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 ^ ^--+ +--^ ^
 | | | |
 v | | v
 +-----------+ | | +-----------+
 | |<--------+ | |
 | IdP1 | | | IdP2 |
 | | +------->| |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 Figure 3: A call with IdP-based identity
 Figure 4 shows essentially the same calling scenario but with a call
 between two separate domains (i.e., a federated case), as in
 Figure 2. As mentioned above, the domains communicate by some
 unspecified protocol and providing separate signaling and identity
 allows for calls to be authenticated regardless of the details of the
 inter-domain protocol.
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 +----------------+ Unspecified +----------------+
 | | protocol | |
 | Signaling |<----------------->| Signaling |
 | Server | (SIP, XMPP, ...) | Server |
 | | | |
 +----------------+ +----------------+
 ^ ^
 | |
 HTTPS | | HTTPS
 | |
 | |
 v v
 JS API JS API
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 | | Media | |
 Alice | Browser |<--------------------------->| Browser | Bob
 | | DTLS+SRTP | |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 ^ ^--+ +--^ ^
 | | | |
 v | | v
 +-----------+ | | +-----------+
 | |<-------------------------+ | |
 | IdP1 | | | IdP2 |
 | | +------------------------>| |
 +-----------+ +-----------+
 Figure 4: A federated call with IdP-based identity
4.1. Initial Signaling
 For simplicity, assume the topology in Figure 3. Alice and Bob are
 both users of a common calling service; they both have approved the
 calling service to make calls (we defer the discussion of device
 access permissions till later). They are both connected to the
 calling service via HTTPS and so know the origin with some level of
 confidence. They also have accounts with some identity provider.
 This sort of identity service is becoming increasingly common in the
 Web environment in technologies such (BrowserID, Federated Google
 Login, Facebook Connect, OAuth, OpenID, WebFinger), and is often
 provided as a side effect service of a user's ordinary accounts with
 some service. In this example, we show Alice and Bob using a
 separate identity service, though the identity service may be the
 same entity as the calling service or there may be no identity
 service at all.
 Alice is logged onto the calling service and decides to call Bob. She
 can see from the calling service that he is online and the calling
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 service presents a JS UI in the form of a button next to Bob's name
 which says "Call". Alice clicks the button, which initiates a JS
 callback that instantiates a PeerConnection object. This does not
 require a security check: JS from any origin is allowed to get this
 far.
 Once the PeerConnection is created, the calling service JS needs to
 set up some media. Because this is an audio/video call, it creates a
 MediaStream with two MediaStreamTracks, one connected to an audio
 input and one connected to a video input. At this point the first
 security check is required: untrusted origins are not allowed to
 access the camera and microphone, so the browser prompts Alice for
 permission.
 In the current W3C API, once some streams have been added, Alice's
 browser + JS generates a signaling message [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-jsep]
 containing:
 o Media channel information
 o Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) [RFC5245] candidates
 o A fingerprint attribute binding the communication to a key pair
 [RFC5763]. Note that this key may simply be ephemerally generated
 for this call or specific to this domain, and Alice may have a
 large number of such keys.
 Prior to sending out the signaling message, the PeerConnection code
 contacts the identity service and obtains an assertion binding
 Alice's identity to her fingerprint. The exact details depend on the
 identity service (though as discussed in Section 5.6 PeerConnection
 can be agnostic to them), but for now it's easiest to think of as a
 BrowserID assertion. The assertion may bind other information to the
 identity besides the fingerprint, but at minimum it needs to bind the
 fingerprint.
 This message is sent to the signaling server, e.g., by XMLHttpRequest
 [XmlHttpRequest] or by WebSockets [RFC6455]. preferably over TLS
 [RFC5246]. The signaling server processes the message from Alice's
 browser, determines that this is a call to Bob and sends a signaling
 message to Bob's browser (again, the format is currently undefined).
 The JS on Bob's browser processes it, and alerts Bob to the incoming
 call and to Alice's identity. In this case, Alice has provided an
 identity assertion and so Bob's browser contacts Alice's identity
 provider (again, this is done in a generic way so the browser has no
 specific knowledge of the IdP) to verify the assertion. This allows
 the browser to display a trusted element in the browser chrome
 indicating that a call is coming in from Alice. If Alice is in Bob's
 address book, then this interface might also include her real name, a
 picture, etc. The calling site will also provide some user interface
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 element (e.g., a button) to allow Bob to answer the call, though this
 is most likely not part of the trusted UI.
 If Bob agrees a PeerConnection is instantiated with the message from
 Alice's side. Then, a similar process occurs as on Alice's browser:
 Bob's browser prompts him for device permission, the media streams
 are created, and a return signaling message containing media
 information, ICE candidates, and a fingerprint is sent back to Alice
 via the signaling service. If Bob has a relationship with an IdP,
 the message will also come with an identity assertion.
 At this point, Alice and Bob each know that the other party wants to
 have a secure call with them. Based purely on the interface provided
 by the signaling server, they know that the signaling server claims
 that the call is from Alice to Bob. This level of security is
 provided merely by having the fingerprint in the message and having
 that message received securely from the signaling server. Because
 the far end sent an identity assertion along with their message, they
 know that this is verifiable from the IdP as well. Note that if the
 call is federated, as shown in Figure 4 then Alice is able to verify
 Bob's identity in a way that is not mediated by either her signaling
 server or Bob's. Rather, she verifies it directly with Bob's IdP.
 Of course, the call works perfectly well if either Alice or Bob
 doesn't have a relationship with an IdP; they just get a lower level
 of assurance. I.e., they simply have whatever information their
 calling site claims about the caller/calllee's identity. Moreover,
 Alice might wish to make an anonymous call through an anonymous
 calling site, in which case she would of course just not provide any
 identity assertion and the calling site would mask her identity from
 Bob.
4.2. Media Consent Verification
 As described in ([I-D.ietf-rtcweb-security]; Section 4.2) media
 consent verification is provided via ICE. Thus, Alice and Bob
 perform ICE checks with each other. At the completion of these
 checks, they are ready to send non-ICE data.
 At this point, Alice knows that (a) Bob (assuming he is verified via
 his IdP) or someone else who the signaling service is claiming is Bob
 is willing to exchange traffic with her and (b) that either Bob is at
 the IP address which she has verified via ICE or there is an attacker
 who is on-path to that IP address detouring the traffic. Note that
 it is not possible for an attacker who is on-path between Alice and
 Bob but not attached to the signaling service to spoof these checks
 because they do not have the ICE credentials. Bob has the same
 security guarantees with respect to Alice.
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4.3. DTLS Handshake
 Once the ICE checks have completed [more specifically, once some ICE
 checks have completed], Alice and Bob can set up a secure channel or
 channels. This is performed via DTLS [RFC4347] (for the data
 channel) and DTLS-SRTP [RFC5763] keying for SRTP [RFC3711] for the
 media channel and SCTP over DTLS [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-sctp-dtls-encaps]
 for data channels. Specifically, Alice and Bob perform a DTLS
 handshake on every channel which has been established by ICE. The
 total number of channels depends on the amount of muxing; in the most
 likely case we are using both RTP/RTCP mux and muxing multiple media
 streams on the same channel, in which case there is only one DTLS
 handshake. Once the DTLS handshake has completed, the keys are
 exported [RFC5705] and used to key SRTP for the media channels.
 At this point, Alice and Bob know that they share a set of secure
 data and/or media channels with keys which are not known to any
 third-party attacker. If Alice and Bob authenticated via their IdPs,
 then they also know that the signaling service is not mounting a man-
 in-the-middle attack on their traffic. Even if they do not use an
 IdP, as long as they have minimal trust in the signaling service not
 to perform a man-in-the-middle attack, they know that their
 communications are secure against the signaling service as well
 (i.e., that the signaling service cannot mount a passive attack on
 the communications).
4.4. Communications and Consent Freshness
 From a security perspective, everything from here on in is a little
 anticlimactic: Alice and Bob exchange data protected by the keys
 negotiated by DTLS. Because of the security guarantees discussed in
 the previous sections, they know that the communications are
 encrypted and authenticated.
 The one remaining security property we need to establish is "consent
 freshness", i.e., allowing Alice to verify that Bob is still prepared
 to receive her communications so that Alice does not continue to send
 large traffic volumes to entities which went abruptly offline. ICE
 specifies periodic STUN keepalizes but only if media is not flowing.
 Because the consent issue is more difficult here, we require RTCWeb
 implementations to periodically send keepalives. As described in
 Section 5.3, these keepalives MUST be based on the consent freshness
 mechanism specified in [I-D.muthu-behave-consent-freshness]. If a
 keepalive fails and no new ICE channels can be established, then the
 session is terminated.
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5. Detailed Technical Description
5.1. Origin and Web Security Issues
 The basic unit of permissions for WebRTC is the origin [RFC6454].
 Because the security of the origin depends on being able to
 authenticate content from that origin, the origin can only be
 securely established if data is transferred over HTTPS [RFC2818].
 Thus, clients MUST treat HTTP and HTTPS origins as different
 permissions domains. [Note: this follows directly from the origin
 security model and is stated here merely for clarity.]
 Many web browsers currently forbid by default any active mixed
 content on HTTPS pages. That is, when JavaScript is loaded from an
 HTTP origin onto an HTTPS page, an error is displayed and the HTTP
 content is not executed unless the user overrides the error. Any
 browser which enforces such a policy will also not permit access to
 WebRTC functionality from mixed content pages (because they never
 display mixed content). Browsers which allow active mixed content
 MUST nevertheless disable WebRTC functionality in mixed content
 settings.
 Note that it is possible for a page which was not mixed content to
 become mixed content during the duration of the call. The major risk
 here is that the newly arrived insecure JS might redirect media to a
 location controlled by the attacker. Implementations MUST either
 choose to terminate the call or display a warning at that point.
5.2. Device Permissions Model
 Implementations MUST obtain explicit user consent prior to providing
 access to the camera and/or microphone. Implementations MUST at
 minimum support the following two permissions models for HTTPS
 origins.
 o Requests for one-time camera/microphone access.
 o Requests for permanent access.
 Because HTTP origins cannot be securely established against network
 attackers, implementations MUST NOT allow the setting of permanent
 access permissions for HTTP origins. Implementations MAY also opt to
 refuse all permissions grants for HTTP origins, but it is RECOMMENDED
 that currently they support one-time camera/microphone access.
 In addition, they SHOULD support requests for access that promise
 that media from this grant will be sent to a single communicating
 peer (obviously there could be other requests for other peers).
 E.g., "Call customerservice@ford.com". The semantics of this request
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 are that the media stream from the camera and microphone will only be
 routed through a connection which has been cryptographically verified
 (through the IdP mechanism or an X.509 certificate in the DTLS-SRTP
 handshake) as being associated with the stated identity. Note that
 it is unlikely that browsers would have an X.509 certificate, but
 servers might. Browsers servicing such requests SHOULD clearly
 indicate that identity to the user when asking for permission. The
 idea behind this type of permissions is that a user might have a
 fairly narrow list of peers he is willing to communicate with, e.g.,
 "my mother" rather than "anyone on Facebook". Narrow permissions
 grants allow the browser to do that enforcement.
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism for the requesting
 JS to indicate which of these forms of permissions it is
 requesting. This allows the browser client to know what sort of
 user interface experience to provide to the user, including what
 permissions to request from the user and hence what to enforce
 later. For instance, browsers might display a non-invasive door
 hanger ("some features of this site may not work..." when asking
 for long-term permissions) but a more invasive UI ("here is your
 own video") for single-call permissions. The API MAY grant weaker
 permissions than the JS asked for if the user chooses to authorize
 only those permissions, but if it intends to grant stronger ones
 it SHOULD display the appropriate UI for those permissions and
 MUST clearly indicate what permissions are being requested.
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism for the requesting
 JS to relinquish the ability to see or modify the media (e.g., via
 MediaStream.record()). Combined with secure authentication of the
 communicating peer, this allows a user to be sure that the calling
 site is not accessing or modifying their conversion.
 UI Requirement: The UI MUST clearly indicate when the user's camera
 and microphone are in use. This indication MUST NOT be
 suppressable by the JS and MUST clearly indicate how to terminate
 device access, and provide a UI means to immediately stop camera/
 microphone input without the JS being able to prevent it.
 UI Requirement: If the UI indication of camera/microphone use are
 displayed in the browser such that minimizing the browser window
 would hide the indication, or the JS creating an overlapping
 window would hide the indication, then the browser SHOULD stop
 camera and microphone input when the indication is hidden. [Note:
 this may not be necessary in systems that are non-windows-based
 but that have good notifications support, such as phones.]
 [[OPEN ISSUE: This section does not have WG consensus. Because
 screen/application sharing presents a more significant risk than
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 camera and microphone access (see the discussion in
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-security] S 4.1.1), we require a higher level of
 user consent.
 o Browsers MUST not permit permanent screen or application sharing
 permissions to be installed as a response to a JS request for
 permissions. Instead, they must require some other user action
 such as a permissions setting or an application install experience
 to grant permission to a site.
 o Browsers MUST provide a separate dialog request for screen/
 application sharing permissions even if the media request is made
 at the same time as camera and microphone.
 o The browser MUST indicate any windows which are currently being
 shared in some unambiguous way. Windows which are not visible
 MUST not be shared even if the application is being shared. If
 the screen is being shared, then that MUST be indicated.
 -- END OF OPEN ISSUE]]
 Clients MAY permit the formation of data channels without any direct
 user approval. Because sites can always tunnel data through the
 server, further restrictions on the data channel do not provide any
 additional security. (though see Section 5.3 for a related issue).
 Implementations which support some form of direct user authentication
 SHOULD also provide a policy by which a user can authorize calls only
 to specific communicating peers. Specifically, the implementation
 SHOULD provide the following interfaces/controls:
 o Allow future calls to this verified user.
 o Allow future calls to any verified user who is in my system
 address book (this only works with address book integration, of
 course).
 Implementations SHOULD also provide a different user interface
 indication when calls are in progress to users whose identities are
 directly verifiable. Section 5.5 provides more on this.
5.3. Communications Consent
 Browser client implementations of WebRTC MUST implement ICE. Server
 gateway implementations which operate only at public IP addresses
 MUST implement either full ICE or ICE-Lite [RFC5245].
 Browser implementations MUST verify reachability via ICE prior to
 sending any non-ICE packets to a given destination. Implementations
 MUST NOT provide the ICE transaction ID to JavaScript during the
 lifetime of the transaction (i.e., during the period when the ICE
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 stack would accept a new response for that transaction). The JS MUST
 NOT be permitted to control the local ufrag and password, though it
 of course knows it.
 While continuing consent is required, that ICE [RFC5245]; Section 10
 keepalives STUN Binding Indications are one-way and therefore not
 sufficient. The current WG consensus is to use ICE Binding Requests
 for continuing consent freshness. ICE already requires that
 implementations respond to such requests, so this approach is
 maximally compatible. A separate document will profile the ICE
 timers to be used; see [I-D.muthu-behave-consent-freshness].
5.4. IP Location Privacy
 A side effect of the default ICE behavior is that the peer learns
 one's IP address, which leaks large amounts of location information.
 This has negative privacy consequences in some circumstances. The
 API requirements in this section are intended to mitigate this issue.
 Note that these requirements are NOT intended to protect the user's
 IP address from a malicious site. In general, the site will learn at
 least a user's server reflexive address from any HTTP transaction.
 Rather, these requirements are intended to allow a site to cooperate
 with the user to hide the user's IP address from the other side of
 the call. Hiding the user's IP address from the server requires some
 sort of explicit privacy preserving mechanism on the client (e.g.,
 Torbutton [https://www.torproject.org/torbutton/]) and is out of
 scope for this specification.
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism to allow the JS to
 suppress ICE negotiation (though perhaps to allow candidate
 gathering) until the user has decided to answer the call [note:
 determining when the call has been answered is a question for the
 JS.] This enables a user to prevent a peer from learning their IP
 address if they elect not to answer a call and also from learning
 whether the user is online.
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism for the calling
 application JS to indicate that only TURN candidates are to be
 used. This prevents the peer from learning one's IP address at
 all. This mechanism MUST also permit suppression of the related
 address field, since that leaks local addresses.
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism for the calling
 application to reconfigure an existing call to add non-TURN
 candidates. Taken together, this and the previous requirement
 allow ICE negotiation to start immediately on incoming call
 notification, thus reducing post-dial delay, but also to avoid
 disclosing the user's IP address until they have decided to
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 answer. They also allow users to completely hide their IP address
 for the duration of the call. Finally, they allow a mechanism for
 the user to optimize performance by reconfiguring to allow non-
 turn candidates during an active call if the user decides they no
 longer need to hide their IP address
 Note that some enterprises may operate proxies and/or NATs designed
 to hide internal IP addresses from the outside world. WebRTC
 provides no explicit mechanism to allow this function. Either such
 enterprises need to proxy the HTTP/HTTPS and modify the SDP and/or
 the JS, or there needs to be browser support to set the "TURN-only"
 policy regardless of the site's preferences.
5.5. Communications Security
 Implementations MUST implement SRTP [RFC3711]. Implementations MUST
 implement DTLS [RFC4347] and DTLS-SRTP [RFC5763][RFC5764] for SRTP
 keying. Implementations MUST implement
 [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-sctp-dtls-encaps].
 All media channels MUST be secured via SRTP. Media traffic MUST NOT
 be sent over plain (unencrypted) RTP; that is, implementations MUST
 NOT negotiate cipher suites with NULL encryption modes. DTLS-SRTP
 MUST be offered for every media channel. WebRTC implementations MUST
 NOT offer SDES or select it if offered.
 All data channels MUST be secured via DTLS.
 All implementations MUST implement both DTLS 1.2 and DTLS 1.0, with
 the cipher suites TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 and
 TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA and the DTLS-SRTP protection profile
 SRTP_AES128_CM_HMAC_SHA1_80. Implementations SHOULD favor cipher
 suites which support PFS over non-PFS cipher suites and GCM over CBC
 cipher suites. [[OPEN ISSUE: Should we require ECDHE? Waiting for
 TLS WG Consensus.]]
 API Requirement: The API MUST provide a mechanism to indicate that a
 fresh DTLS key pair is to be generated for a specific call. This
 is intended to allow for unlinkability. Note that there are also
 settings where it is attractive to use the same keying material
 repeatedly, especially those with key continuity-based
 authentication. Unless the user specifically configures an
 external key pair, different key pairs MUST be used for each
 origin. (This avoids creating a super-cookie.)
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 API Requirement: When DTLS-SRTP is used, the API MUST NOT permit the
 JS to obtain the negotiated keying material. This requirement
 preserves the end-to-end security of the media.
 UI Requirements: A user-oriented client MUST provide an
 "inspector" interface which allows the user to determine the
 security characteristics of the media.
 The following properties SHOULD be displayed "up-front" in the
 browser chrome, i.e., without requiring the user to ask for them:
 * A client MUST provide a user interface through which a user may
 determine the security characteristics for currently-displayed
 audio and video stream(s)
 * A client MUST provide a user interface through which a user may
 determine the security characteristics for transmissions of
 their microphone audio and camera video.
 * The "security characteristics" MUST include an indication as to
 whether the cryptographic keys were delivered out-of-band (from
 a server) or were generated as a result of a pairwise
 negotiation.
 * If the far endpoint was directly verified, either via a third-
 party verifiable X.509 certificate or via a Web IdP mechanism
 (see Section 5.6) the "security characteristics" MUST include
 the verified information. X.509 identities and Web IdP
 identities have similar semantics and should be displayed in a
 similar way.
 The following properties are more likely to require some "drill-
 down" from the user:
 * The "security characteristics" MUST indicate the cryptographic
 algorithms in use (For example: "AES-CBC" or "Null Cipher".)
 However, if Null ciphers are used, that MUST be presented to
 the user at the top-level UI.
 * The "security characteristics" MUST indicate whether PFS is
 provided.
 * The "security characteristics" MUST include some mechanism to
 allow an out-of-band verification of the peer, such as a
 certificate fingerprint or an SAS.
5.6. Web-Based Peer Authentication
 In a number of cases, it is desirable for the endpoint (i.e., the
 browser) to be able to directly identity the endpoint on the other
 side without trusting only the signaling service to which they are
 connected. For instance, users may be making a call via a federated
 system where they wish to get direct authentication of the other
 side. Alternately, they may be making a call on a site which they
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 minimally trust (such as a poker site) but to someone who has an
 identity on a site they do trust (such as a social network.)
 Recently, a number of Web-based identity technologies (OAuth,
 BrowserID, Facebook Connect), etc. have been developed. While the
 details vary, what these technologies share is that they have a Web-
 based (i.e., HTTP/HTTPS) identity provider which attests to your
 identity. For instance, if I have an account at example.org, I could
 use the example.org identity provider to prove to others that I was
 alice@example.org. The development of these technologies allows us
 to separate calling from identity provision: I could call you on
 Poker Galaxy but identify myself as alice@example.org.
 Whatever the underlying technology, the general principle is that the
 party which is being authenticated is NOT the signaling site but
 rather the user (and their browser). Similarly, the relying party is
 the browser and not the signaling site. Thus, the browser MUST
 securely generate the input to the IdP assertion process and MUST
 securely display the results of the verification process to the user
 in a way which cannot be imitated by the calling site.
 The mechanisms defined in this document do not require the browser to
 implement any particular identity protocol or to support any
 particular IdP. Instead, this document provides a generic interface
 which any IdP can implement. Thus, new IdPs and protocols can be
 introduced without change to either the browser or the calling
 service. This avoids the need to make a commitment to any particular
 identity protocol, although browsers may opt to directly implement
 some identity protocols in order to provide superior performance or
 UI properties.
5.6.1. Trust Relationships: IdPs, APs, and RPs
 Any federated identity protocol has three major participants:
 Authenticating Party (AP): The entity which is trying to establish
 its identity.
 Identity Provider (IdP): The entity which is vouching for the AP's
 identity.
 Relying Party (RP): The entity which is trying to verify the AP's
 identity.
 The AP and the IdP have an account relationship of some kind: the AP
 registers with the IdP and is able to subsequently authenticate
 directly to the IdP (e.g., with a password). This means that the
 browser must somehow know which IdP(s) the user has an account
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 relationship with. This can either be something that the user
 configures into the browser or that is configured at the calling site
 and then provided to the PeerConnection by the Web application at the
 calling site. The use case for having this information configured
 into the browser is that the user may "log into" the browser to bind
 it to some identity. This is becoming common in new browsers.
 However, it should also be possible for the IdP information to simply
 be provided by the calling application.
 At a high level there are two kinds of IdPs:
 Authoritative: IdPs which have verifiable control of some section
 of the identity space. For instance, in the realm of e-mail, the
 operator of "example.com" has complete control of the namespace
 ending in "@example.com". Thus, "alice@example.com" is whoever
 the operator says it is. Examples of systems with authoritative
 identity providers include DNSSEC, RFC 4474, and Facebook Connect
 (Facebook identities only make sense within the context of the
 Facebook system).
 Third-Party: IdPs which don't have control of their section of the
 identity space but instead verify user's identities via some
 unspecified mechanism and then attest to it. Because the IdP
 doesn't actually control the namespace, RPs need to trust that the
 IdP is correctly verifying AP identities, and there can
 potentially be multiple IdPs attesting to the same section of the
 identity space. Probably the best-known example of a third-party
 identity provider is SSL certificates, where there are a large
 number of CAs all of whom can attest to any domain name.
 If an AP is authenticating via an authoritative IdP, then the RP does
 not need to explicitly configure trust in the IdP at all. The
 identity mechanism can directly verify that the IdP indeed made the
 relevant identity assertion (a function provided by the mechanisms in
 this document), and any assertion it makes about an identity for
 which it is authoritative is directly verifiable. Note that this
 does not mean that the IdP might not lie, but that is a
 trustworthiness judgement that the user can make at the time he looks
 at the identity.
 By contrast, if an AP is authenticating via a third-party IdP, the RP
 needs to explicitly trust that IdP (hence the need for an explicit
 trust anchor list in PKI-based SSL/TLS clients). The list of
 trustable IdPs needs to be configured directly into the browser,
 either by the user or potentially by the browser manufacturer. This
 is a significant advantage of authoritative IdPs and implies that if
 third-party IdPs are to be supported, the potential number needs to
 be fairly small.
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5.6.2. Overview of Operation
 In order to provide security without trusting the calling site, the
 PeerConnection component of the browser must interact directly with
 the IdP. The details of the mechanism are described in the W3C API
 specification, but the general idea is that the PeerConnection
 component downloads JS from a specific location on the IdP dictated
 by the IdP domain name. That JS (the "IdP proxy") runs in an
 isolated security context within the browser and the PeerConnection
 talks to it via a secure message passing channel.
 Note that there are two logically separate functions here:
 o Identity assertion generation.
 o Identity assertion verification.
 The same IdP JS "endpoint" is used for both functions but of course a
 given IdP might behave differently and load new JS to perform one
 function or the other.
 +--------------------------------------+
 | Browser |
 | |
 | +----------------------------------+ |
 | | https://calling-site.example.com | |
 | | | |
 | | Calling JS Code | |
 | | ^ | |
 | +---------------|------------------+ |
 | | API Calls |
 | v |
 | PeerConnection |
 | ^ |
 | | MessageChannel |
 | +-----------|-------------+ | +---------------+
 | | v | | | |
 | | IdP Proxy |<-------->| Identity |
 | | | | | Provider |
 | | https://idp.example.org | | | |
 | +-------------------------+ | +---------------+
 | |
 +--------------------------------------+
 When the PeerConnection object wants to interact with the IdP, the
 sequence of events is as follows:
 1. The browser (the PeerConnection component) instantiates an IdP
 proxy with its source at the IdP. This allows the IdP to load
 whatever JS is necessary into the proxy, which runs in the IdP's
 security context. The browser uses a MessageChannel
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 [WebMessaging] to interact with the IdP proxy.
 2. Once the IdP is ready, the IdP proxy uses the MessageChannel to
 notify the browser that it is ready.
 3. The browser and IdP proxy communicate using the MessageChannel
 using a standardized message exchange to create or verify
 identity assertions.
 This approach allows us to decouple the browser from any particular
 identity provider; the browser need only know how to load the IdP's
 JavaScript--which is deterministic from the IdP's identity--and the
 generic protocol for requesting and verifying assertions. The IdP
 provides whatever logic is necessary to bridge the generic protocol
 to the IdP's specific requirements. Thus, a single browser can
 support any number of identity protocols, including being forward
 compatible with IdPs which did not exist at the time the browser was
 written.
5.6.3. Items for Standardization
 In order to make this work, we must standardize the following items:
 o The precise information from the signaling message that must be
 cryptographically bound to the user's identity and a mechanism for
 carrying assertions in JSEP messages. Section 5.6.4
 o The interface to the IdP. Section 5.6.5 specifies a specific
 protocol mechanism which allows the use of any identity protocol
 without requiring specific further protocol support in the browser
 o The JavaScript interfaces which the calling application can use to
 specify the IdP to use to generate assertions and to discover what
 assertions were received.
 The first two items are defined in this document. The final one is
 defined in the companion W3C WebRTC API specification [webrtc-api].
5.6.4. Binding Identity Assertions to JSEP Offer/Answer Transactions
5.6.4.1. Input to Assertion Generation Process
 An identity assertion binds the user's identity (as asserted by the
 IdP) to the SDP offer/exchange transaction and specifically to the
 media. In order to achieve this, the PeerConnection must provide the
 DTLS-SRTP fingerprint to be bound to the identity. This is provided
 as a JavaScript object (also known as a dictionary or hash) with a
 single "fingerprint" key, as shown below:
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 {
 "fingerprint": [ {
 "algorithm": "sha-256",
 "digest": "4A:AD:B9:B1:3F:...:E5:7C:AB"
 }, {
 "algorithm": "sha-1",
 "digest": "74:E9:76:C8:19:...:F4:45:6B"
 } ]
 }
 The "fingerprint" value is an array of objects. Each object in the
 array contains "algorithm" and "digest" values, which correspond
 directly to the algorithm and digest values in the "a=fingerprint"
 line of the SDP [RFC4572].
 Note: this structure does not need to be interpreted by the IdP or
 the IdP proxy. It is consumed solely by the RP's browser. The IdP
 merely treats it as an opaque value to be attested to. Thus, new
 parameters can be added to the assertion without modifying the IdP.
 This object is encoded in a JSON [RFC4627] string for passing to the
 IdP.
5.6.4.2. Carrying Identity Assertions
 Once an IdP has generated an assertion, it is attached to the SDP
 message. This is done by adding a new a-line to the SDP, of the form
 a=identity. The sole contents of this value are a base-64 encoded
 [RFC4648] identity assertion. For example:
 v=0
 o=- 1181923068 1181923196 IN IP4 ua1.example.com
 s=example1
 c=IN IP4 ua1.example.com
 a=fingerprint:sha-1 \
 4A:AD:B9:B1:3F:82:18:3B:54:02:12:DF:3E:5D:49:6B:19:E5:7C:AB
 a=identity:\
 eyJpZHAiOnsiZG9tYWluIjoiZXhhbXBsZS5vcmciLCJwcm90b2NvbCI6ImJvZ3Vz\
 In0sImFzc2VydGlvbiI6IntcImlkZW50aXR5XCI6XCJib2JAZXhhbXBsZS5vcmdc\
 IixcImNvbnRlbnRzXCI6XCJhYmNkZWZnaGlqa2xtbm9wcXJzdHV2d3l6XCIsXCJz\
 aWduYXR1cmVcIjpcIjAxMDIwMzA0MDUwNlwifSJ9
 a=...
 t=0 0
 m=audio 6056 RTP/SAVP 0
 a=sendrecv
 ...
 Each identity attribute should be paired (and attests to) with an
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 "a=fingerprint" attribute and therefore can exist either at the
 session or media level. Multiple identity attributes may appear at
 either level, though it is RECOMMENDED that implementations not do
 this, because it becomes very unclear what security claim that they
 are making and the UI guidelines above become unclear. Browsers MAY
 choose refuse to display any identity indicators in the face of
 multiple identity attributes with different identities but SHOULD
 process multiple attributes with the same identity as described
 above.
 Multiple "a=fingerprint" values can be used to offer alternative
 certificates for a peer. The "a=identity" attribute MUST include all
 fingerprint values that are included in "a=fingerprint" lines. This
 ensures that the in-use certificate for a DTLS connection is in the
 set of fingerprints returned from the IdP when verifying an
 assertion. This MUST be enforced by an RP by ensuring that all
 "a=fingerprint" attributes for a given media section are present in
 the "VERIFY" response (see Section 5.6.5.4).
5.6.4.3. a=identity Attribute
 The identity attribute is session level only. It contains an
 identity assertion, encoded as a base-64 string [RFC4648].
 The syntax of this SDP attribute is defined using Augmented BNF
 [RFC5234]:
 identity-attribute = "identity:" identity-assertion
 [ SP identity-extension
 *(";" [ SP ] identity-extension) ]
 identity-assertion = base64
 base64 = 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "+" / "/" / "=" )
 identity-extension = extension-att-name [ "=" extension-att-value ]
 extension-att-name = token
 extension-att-value = 1*(%x01-09 / %x0b-0c / %x0e-3a / %x3c-ff)
 ; byte-string from [RFC4566] omitting ";"
 No extensions are defined for this attribute.
5.6.5. IdP Interaction Details
5.6.5.1. General Message Structure
 Messages between the PeerConnection object and the IdP proxy are
 JavaScript objects, shown in examples using JSON [RFC4627]. For
 instance, the PeerConnection would request a signature with the
 following "SIGN" message:
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 {
 "type": "SIGN",
 "id": "1",
 "origin": "https://calling-site.example.com",
 "message": "012345678abcdefghijkl"
 }
 All messages MUST contain a "type" field which indicates the general
 meaning of the message.
 All requests from the PeerConnection object MUST contain an "id"
 field which MUST be unique within the scope of the interaction
 between the browser and the IdP instance. Responses from the IdP
 proxy MUST contain the same "id" in response, which allows the
 PeerConnection to correlate requests and responses, in case there are
 multiple requests/responses outstanding to the same proxy.
 All requests from the PeerConnection object MUST contain an "origin"
 field containing the origin of the JS which initiated the PC (i.e.,
 the URL of the calling site). This origin value can be used by the
 IdP to make access control decisions. For instance, an IdP might
 only issue identity assertions for certain calling services in the
 same way that some IdPs require that relying Web sites have an API
 key before learning user identity.
 Any message-specific data is carried in a "message" field. Depending
 on the message type, this may either be a string or any JavaScript
 object that can be conveyed in a message channel. This includes any
 object that is able to be serialized to JSON.
5.6.5.2. Errors
 If an error occurs, the IdP sends a message of type "ERROR". The
 message MAY have an "error" field containing freeform text data which
 containing additional information about what happened. For instance:
 {
 "type": "ERROR",
 "id": "1",
 "error": "Signature verification failed"
 }
 Figure 5: Example error
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5.6.5.3. IdP Proxy Setup
 In order to perform an identity transaction, the PeerConnection must
 first create an IdP proxy. While the details of this are specified
 in the W3C API document, from the perspective of this specification,
 however, the relevant facts are:
 o The JS runs in the IdP's security context with the base page
 retrieved from the URL specified in Section 5.6.5.3.1.
 o The usual browser sandbox isolation mechanisms MUST be enforced
 with respect to the IdP proxy. The IdP cannot be provided with
 escalated privileges.
 o JS running in the IdP proxy MUST be able to send and receive
 messages to the PeerConnection and the PC and IdP proxy are able
 to verify the source and destination of these messages.
 o The IdP proxy is unable to interact with the user. This includes
 the creation of popup windows and dialogs.
 Initially the IdP proxy is in an unready state; the IdP JS must be
 loaded and there may be several round trips to the IdP server to load
 and prepare necessary resources.
 When the IdP proxy is ready to receive commands, it delivers a
 "READY" message. As this message is unsolicited, it contains only
 the "type":
 { "type":"READY" }
 Once the PeerConnection object receives the ready message, it can
 send commands to the IdP proxy.
5.6.5.3.1. Determining the IdP URI
 In order to ensure that the IdP is under control of the domain owner
 rather than someone who merely has an account on the domain owner's
 server (e.g., in shared hosting scenarios), the IdP JavaScript is
 hosted at a deterministic location based on the IdP's domain name.
 Each IdP proxy instance is associated with two values:
 domain name: The IdP's domain name
 protocol: The specific IdP protocol which the IdP is using. This is
 a completely opaque IdP-specific string, but allows an IdP to
 implement two protocols in parallel. This value may be the empty
 string.
 Each IdP MUST serve its initial entry page (i.e., the one loaded by
 the IdP proxy) from a well-known URI [RFC5785]. The well-known URI
 for an IdP proxy is formed from the following URI components:
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 1. The scheme, "https:". An IdP MUST be loaded using HTTPS
 [RFC2818].
 2. The authority, which is the IdP domain name. The authority MAY
 contain a non-default port number. Any port number is removed
 when determining if an asserted identity matches the name of the
 IdP. The authority MUST NOT include a userinfo sub-component.
 3. The path, starting with "/.well-known/idp-proxy/" and appended
 with the IdP protocol. Note that the separator characters '/'
 (%2F) and '\' (%5C) MUST NOT be permitted in the protocol field,
 lest an attacker be able to direct requests outside of the
 controlled "/.well-known/" prefix. Query and fragment values MAY
 be used by including '?' or '#' characters.
 For example, for the IdP "identity.example.com" and the protocol
 "example", the URL would be:
 https://example.com/.well-known/idp-proxy/example
5.6.5.3.1.1. Authenticating Party
 How an AP determines the appropriate IdP domain is out of scope of
 this specification. In general, however, the AP has some actual
 account relationship with the IdP, as this identity is what the IdP
 is attesting to. Thus, the AP somehow supplies the IdP information
 to the browser. Some potential mechanisms include:
 o Provided by the user directly.
 o Selected from some set of IdPs known to the calling site. E.g., a
 button that shows "Authenticate via Facebook Connect"
5.6.5.3.1.2. Relying Party
 Unlike the AP, the RP need not have any particular relationship with
 the IdP. Rather, it needs to be able to process whatever assertion
 is provided by the AP. As the assertion contains the IdP's identity,
 the URI can be constructed directly from the assertion, and thus the
 RP can directly verify the technical validity of the assertion with
 no user interaction. Authoritative assertions need only be
 verifiable. Third-party assertions also MUST be verified against
 local policy, as described in Section 5.6.5.4.1.
5.6.5.3.2. Requesting Assertions
 In order to request an assertion, the PeerConnection sends a "SIGN"
 message. Aside from the mandatory fields, this message has a
 "message" field containing a string. The string contains a JSON-
 encoded object containing certificate fingerprints but are treated as
 opaque from the perspective of the IdP.
 An application can optionally provide a user identifier when
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 specifying an IdP. This value is a hint that the IdP can use to
 select amongst multiple identities, or to avoid providing assertions
 for unwanted identities. The user identifier hint is passed to the
 IdP in a "username" field alongside the "message". The "username" is
 a string that has no meaning to any entity other than the IdP, it can
 contain any data the IdP needs in order to correctly generate an
 assertion.
 A successful response to a "SIGN" message contains a "message" field
 which is a JavaScript dictionary consisting of two fields:
 idp: A dictionary containing the domain name of the provider and the
 protocol string.
 assertion: An opaque value containing the assertion itself. This is
 only interpretable by the IdP or its proxy.
 Figure 6 shows an example transaction, with the message "abcde..."
 (remember, the messages are opaque at this layer) being signed and
 bound to identity "ekr@example.org". In this case, the message has
 presumably been digitally signed/MACed in some way that the IdP can
 later verify it, but this is an implementation detail and out of
 scope of this document. Line breaks are inserted solely for
 readability.
 PeerConnection -> IdP proxy:
 {
 "type": "SIGN",
 "id": "1",
 "origin": "https://calling-service.example.com/",
 "message": "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz",
 "username": "bob"
 }
 IdPProxy -> PeerConnection:
 {
 "type": "SUCCESS",
 "id": "1",
 "message": {
 "idp":{
 "domain": "example.org",
 "protocol": "bogus"
 },
 "assertion": "{\"identity\":\"bob@example.org\",
 \"contents\":\"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz\",
 \"signature\":\"010203040506\"}"
 }
 }
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 Figure 6: Example assertion request
 The "message" structure is serialized into JSON, base64-encoded
 [RFC4648], and placed in an "a=identity" attribute.
5.6.5.3.3. Managing User Login
 In order to generate an identity assertion, the IdP needs proof of
 the user's identity. It is common practice to authenticate users
 (using passwords or multi-factor authentication), then use Cookies
 [RFC6265] or HTTP authentication [RFC2617] for subsequent exchanges.
 The IdP proxy is able to access cookies, HTTP authentication or other
 persistent session data because it operates in the security context
 of the IdP origin. Therefore, if a user is logged in, the IdP could
 have all the information needed to generate an assertion.
 An IdP proxy is unable to generate an assertion if the user is not
 logged in, or the IdP wants to interact with the user to acquire more
 information before generating the assertion. If the IdP wants to
 interact with the user before generating an assertion, the IdP proxy
 can respond with a "LOGINNEEDED" message.
 IdPProxy -> PeerConnection:
 {
 "type": "LOGINNEEDED",
 "id": "1",
 "error": "...a message explaining the reason for failure...",
 "loginUrl": "https://example.org/login?context=e982606f4fd5"
 }
 Figure 7: User interaction needed response
 The "loginUrl" field of the "LOGINNEEDED" response contains a URL.
 The PeerConnection provides an error event (or similar) to the
 calling site that includes this URL.
 A calling site is then able to load the provided URL in an IFRAME in
 order to trigger the required user interactions. Once any user
 interactions are complete, the IFRAME MUST send a postMessage
 [WebMessaging] to its containing window indicating completion. Any
 message is sufficient for this purpose, the "source" parameter
 identifies the originating IFRAME.
 In all other respects, "LOGINNEEDED" can be treated as an "ERROR"
 message.
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5.6.5.4. Verifying Assertions
 In order to verify an assertion, an RP sends a "VERIFY" message to
 the IdP proxy containing the assertion supplied by the AP in the
 "message" field.
 The IdP proxy verifies the assertion. Depending on the identity
 protocol, the proxy might contact the IdP server or other servers.
 For instance, an OAuth-based protocol will likely require using the
 IdP as an oracle, whereas with BrowserID the IdP proxy can likely
 verify the signature on the assertion without contacting the IdP,
 provided that it has cached the IdP's public key.
 Regardless of the mechanism, if verification succeeds, a successful
 response from the IdP proxy MUST contain a message field consisting
 of a object with the following fields:
 identity: The identity of the AP from the IdP's perspective.
 Details of this are provided in Section 5.6.5.4.1.
 contents: The original unmodified string provided by the AP in the
 original SIGN request.
 Figure 8 shows an example transaction. Line breaks are inserted
 solely for readability.
 PeerConnection -> IdP Proxy:
 {
 "type": "VERIFY",
 "id": 2,
 "origin": "https://calling-service.example.com/",
 "message": "{\"identity\":\"bob@example.org\",
 \"contents\":\"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz\",
 \"signature\":\"010203040506\"}"
 }
 IdP Proxy -> PeerConnection:
 {
 "type": "SUCCESS",
 "id": 2,
 "message": {
 "identity": "bob@example.org",
 "contents": "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz"
 }
 }
 Figure 8: Example verification request
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5.6.5.4.1. Identity Formats
 Identities passed from the IdP proxy to the PeerConnection are passed
 in the "identity" field. This field MUST consist of a string
 representing the user's identity. This string is in the form
 "<user>@<domain>", where "user" consists of any character except '@',
 and domain is an internationalized domain name [RFC5890].
 The PeerConnection API MUST check this string as follows:
 1. If the domain portion of the string is equal to the domain name
 of the IdP proxy, then the assertion is valid, as the IdP is
 authoritative for this domain. Comparison of domain names is
 done using the label equivalence rule defined in Section 2.3.2.4
 of [RFC5890].
 2. If the domain portion of the string is not equal to the domain
 name of the IdP proxy, then the PeerConnection object MUST reject
 the assertion unless:
 1. the IdP domain is trusted as an acceptable third-party IdP;
 and
 2. local policy is configured to trust this IdP domain for the
 RHS of the identity string.
 Sites which have identities that do not fit into the RFC822 style
 (for instance, identifiers that are simple numeric values, or values
 that contain '@' characters) SHOULD convert them to this form by
 escaping illegal characters and appending their IdP domain (e.g.,
 user%40133@identity.example.com), thus ensuring that they are
 authoritative for the identity.
6. Security Considerations
 Much of the security analysis of this problem is contained in
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-security] or in the discussion of the particular
 issues above. In order to avoid repetition, this section focuses on
 (a) residual threats that are not addressed by this document and (b)
 threats produced by failure/misbehavior of one of the components in
 the system.
6.1. Communications Security
 While this document favors DTLS-SRTP, it permits a variety of
 communications security mechanisms and thus the level of
 communications security actually provided varies considerably. Any
 pair of implementations which have multiple security mechanisms in
 common are subject to being downgraded to the weakest of those common
 mechanisms by any attacker who can modify the signaling traffic. If
 communications are over HTTP, this means any on-path attacker. If
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 communications are over HTTPS, this means the signaling server.
 Implementations which wish to avoid downgrade attack should only
 offer the strongest available mechanism, which is DTLS/DTLS-SRTP.
 Note that the implication of this choice will be that interop to non-
 DTLS-SRTP devices will need to happen through gateways.
 Even if only DTLS/DTLS-SRTP are used, the signaling server can
 potentially mount a man-in-the-middle attack unless implementations
 have some mechanism for independently verifying keys. The UI
 requirements in Section 5.5 are designed to provide such a mechanism
 for motivated/security conscious users, but are not suitable for
 general use. The identity service mechanisms in Section 5.6 are more
 suitable for general use. Note, however, that a malicious signaling
 service can strip off any such identity assertions, though it cannot
 forge new ones. Note that all of the third-party security mechanisms
 available (whether X.509 certificates or a third-party IdP) rely on
 the security of the third party--this is of course also true of your
 connection to the Web site itself. Users who wish to assure
 themselves of security against a malicious identity provider can only
 do so by verifying peer credentials directly, e.g., by checking the
 peer's fingerprint against a value delivered out of band.
 In order to protect against malicious content JavaScript, that
 JavaScript MUST NOT be allowed to have direct access to---or perform
 computations with---DTLS keys. For instance, if content JS were able
 to compute digital signatures, then it would be possible for content
 JS to get an identity assertion for a browser's generated key and
 then use that assertion plus a signature by the key to authenticate a
 call protected under an ephemeral DH key controlled by the content
 JS, thus violating the security guarantees otherwise provided by the
 IdP mechanism. Note that it is not sufficient merely to deny the
 content JS direct access to the keys, as some have suggested doing
 with the WebCrypto API. [webcrypto]. The JS must also not be allowed
 to perform operations that would be valid for a DTLS endpoint. By
 far the safest approach is simply to deny the ability to perform any
 operations that depend on secret information associated with the key.
 Operations that depend on public information, such as exporting the
 public key are of course safe.
6.2. Privacy
 The requirements in this document are intended to allow:
 o Users to participate in calls without revealing their location.
 o Potential callees to avoid revealing their location and even
 presence status prior to agreeing to answer a call.
 However, these privacy protections come at a performance cost in
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 terms of using TURN relays and, in the latter case, delaying ICE.
 Sites SHOULD make users aware of these tradeoffs.
 Note that the protections provided here assume a non-malicious
 calling service. As the calling service always knows the users
 status and (absent the use of a technology like Tor) their IP
 address, they can violate the users privacy at will. Users who wish
 privacy against the calling sites they are using must use separate
 privacy enhancing technologies such as Tor. Combined WebRTC/Tor
 implementations SHOULD arrange to route the media as well as the
 signaling through Tor. Currently this will produce very suboptimal
 performance.
 Additionally, any identifier which persists across multiple calls is
 potentially a problem for privacy, especially for anonymous calling
 services. Such services SHOULD instruct the browser to use separate
 DTLS keys for each call and also to use TURN throughout the call.
 Otherwise, the other side will learn linkable information.
 Additionally, browsers SHOULD implement the privacy-preserving CNAME
 generation mode of [I-D.ietf-avtcore-6222bis].
6.3. Denial of Service
 The consent mechanisms described in this document are intended to
 mitigate denial of service attacks in which an attacker uses clients
 to send large amounts of traffic to a victim without the consent of
 the victim. While these mechanisms are sufficient to protect victims
 who have not implemented WebRTC at all, WebRTC implementations need
 to be more careful.
 Consider the case of a call center which accepts calls via RTCWeb.
 An attacker proxies the call center's front-end and arranges for
 multiple clients to initiate calls to the call center. Note that
 this requires user consent in many cases but because the data channel
 does not need consent, he can use that directly. Since ICE will
 complete, browsers can then be induced to send large amounts of data
 to the victim call center if it supports the data channel at all.
 Preventing this attack requires that automated WebRTC implementations
 implement sensible flow control and have the ability to triage out
 (i.e., stop responding to ICE probes on) calls which are behaving
 badly, and especially to be prepared to remotely throttle the data
 channel in the absence of plausible audio and video (which the
 attacker cannot control).
 Another related attack is for the signaling service to swap the ICE
 candidates for the audio and video streams, thus forcing a browser to
 send video to the sink that the other victim expects will contain
 audio (perhaps it is only expecting audio!) potentially causing
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 overload. Muxing multiple media flows over a single transport makes
 it harder to individually suppress a single flow by denying ICE
 keepalives. Either media-level (RTCP) mechanisms must be used or the
 implementation must deny responses entirely, thus terminating the
 call.
 Yet another attack, suggested by Magnus Westerlund, is for the
 attacker to cross-connect offers and answers as follows. It induces
 the victim to make a call and then uses its control of other users
 browsers to get them to attempt a call to someone. It then
 translates their offers into apparent answers to the victim, which
 looks like large-scale parallel forking. The victim still responds
 to ICE responses and now the browsers all try to send media to the
 victim. Implementations can defend themselves from this attack by
 only responding to ICE Binding Requests for a limited number of
 remote ufrags (this is the reason for the requirement that the JS not
 be able to control the ufrag and password).
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-rtp-usage] Section 13 documents a number of
 potential RTCP-based DoS attacks and countermeasures.
 Note that attacks based on confusing one end or the other about
 consent are possible even in the face of the third-party identity
 mechanism as long as major parts of the signaling messages are not
 signed. On the other hand, signing the entire message severely
 restricts the capabilities of the calling application, so there are
 difficult tradeoffs here.
6.4. IdP Authentication Mechanism
 This mechanism relies for its security on the IdP and on the
 PeerConnection correctly enforcing the security invariants described
 above. At a high level, the IdP is attesting that the user
 identified in the assertion wishes to be associated with the
 assertion. Thus, it must not be possible for arbitrary third parties
 to get assertions tied to a user or to produce assertions that RPs
 will accept.
6.4.1. PeerConnection Origin Check
 Fundamentally, the IdP proxy is just a piece of HTML and JS loaded by
 the browser, so nothing stops a Web attacker o from creating their
 own IFRAME, loading the IdP proxy HTML/JS, and requesting a
 signature. In order to prevent this attack, we require that all
 signatures be tied to a specific origin ("rtcweb://...") which cannot
 be produced by content JavaScript. Thus, while an attacker can
 instantiate the IdP proxy, they cannot send messages from an
 appropriate origin and so cannot create acceptable assertions. I.e.,
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 the assertion request must have come from the browser. This origin
 check is enforced on the relying party side, not on the
 authenticating party side. The reason for this is to take the burden
 of knowing which origins are valid off of the IdP, thus making this
 mechanism extensible to other applications besides WebRTC. The IdP
 simply needs to gather the origin information (from the posted
 message) and attach it to the assertion.
 Note that although this origin check is enforced on the RP side and
 not at the IdP, it is absolutely imperative that it be done. The
 mechanisms in this document rely on the browser enforcing access
 restrictions on the DTLS keys and assertion requests which do not
 come with the right origin may be from content JS rather than from
 browsers, and therefore those access restrictions cannot be assumed.
 Note that this check only asserts that the browser (or some other
 entity with access to the user's authentication data) attests to the
 request and hence to the fingerprint. It does not demonstrate that
 the browser has access to the associated private key. However,
 attaching one's identity to a key that the user does not control does
 not appear to provide substantial leverage to an attacker, so a proof
 of possession is omitted for simplicity.
6.4.2. IdP Well-known URI
 As described in Section 5.6.5.3.1 the IdP proxy HTML/JS landing page
 is located at a well-known URI based on the IdP's domain name. This
 requirement prevents an attacker who can write some resources at the
 IdP (e.g., on one's Facebook wall) from being able to impersonate the
 IdP.
6.4.3. Privacy of IdP-generated identities and the hosting site
 Depending on the structure of the IdP's assertions, the calling site
 may learn the user's identity from the perspective of the IdP. In
 many cases this is not an issue because the user is authenticating to
 the site via the IdP in any case, for instance when the user has
 logged in with Facebook Connect and is then authenticating their call
 with a Facebook identity. However, in other case, the user may not
 have already revealed their identity to the site. In general, IdPs
 SHOULD either verify that the user is willing to have their identity
 revealed to the site (e.g., through the usual IdP permissions dialog)
 or arrange that the identity information is only available to known
 RPs (e.g., social graph adjacencies) but not to the calling site.
 The "origin" field of the signature request can be used to check that
 the user has agreed to disclose their identity to the calling site;
 because it is supplied by the PeerConnection it can be trusted to be
 correct.
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6.4.4. Security of Third-Party IdPs
 As discussed above, each third-party IdP represents a new universal
 trust point and therefore the number of these IdPs needs to be quite
 limited. Most IdPs, even those which issue unqualified identities
 such as Facebook, can be recast as authoritative IdPs (e.g.,
 123456@facebook.com). However, in such cases, the user interface
 implications are not entirely desirable. One intermediate approach
 is to have special (potentially user configurable) UI for large
 authoritative IdPs, thus allowing the user to instantly grasp that
 the call is being authenticated by Facebook, Google, etc.
6.4.5. Web Security Feature Interactions
 A number of optional Web security features have the potential to
 cause issues for this mechanism, as discussed below.
6.4.5.1. Popup Blocking
 The IdP proxy is unable to generate popup windows, dialogs or any
 other form of user interactions. This prevents the IdP proxy from
 being used to circumvent user interaction. The "LOGINNEEDED" message
 allows the IdP proxy to inform the calling site of a need for user
 login, providing the information necessary to satisfy this
 requirement without resorting to direct user interaction from the IdP
 proxy itself.
6.4.5.2. Third Party Cookies
 Some browsers allow users to block third party cookies (cookies
 associated with origins other than the top level page) for privacy
 reasons. Any IdP which uses cookies to persist logins will be broken
 by third-party cookie blocking. One option is to accept this as a
 limitation; another is to have the PeerConnection object disable
 third-party cookie blocking for the IdP proxy.
7. IANA Considerations
 This specification defines the "identity" SDP attribute per the
 procedures of Section 8.2.4 of [RFC4566]. The required information
 for the registration is included here:
 Contact Name: Eric Rescorla (ekr@rftm.com)
 Attribute Name: identity
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 Long Form: identity
 Type of Attribute: session-level
 Charset Considerations: This attribute is not subject to the charset
 attribute.
 Purpose: This attribute carries an identity assertion, binding an
 identity to the transport-level security session.
 Appropriate Values: See Section 5.6.4.3 of RFCXXXX [[Editor Note:
 This document.
8. Acknowledgements
 Bernard Aboba, Harald Alvestrand, Richard Barnes, Dan Druta, Cullen
 Jennings, Hadriel Kaplan, Matthew Kaufman, Jim McEachern, Martin
 Thomson, Magnus Westerland. Matthew Kaufman provided the UI material
 in Section 5.5.
9. Changes
9.1. Changes since -06
 Replaced RTCWEB and RTC-Web with WebRTC, except when referring to the
 IETF WG
 Forbade use in mixed content as discussed in Orlando.
 Added a requirement to surface NULL ciphers to the top-level.
 Tried to clarify SRTP versus DTLS-SRTP.
 Added a section on screen sharing permissions.
 Assorted editorial work.
9.2. Changes since -05
 The following changes have been made since the -05 draft.
 o Response to comments from Richard Barnes
 o More explanation of the IdP security properties and the federation
 use case.
 o Editorial cleanup.
9.3. Changes since -03
 Version -04 was a version control mistake. Please ignore.
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 The following changes have been made since the -04 draft.
 o Move origin check from IdP to RP per discussion in YVR.
 o Clarified treatment of X.509-level identities.
 o Editorial cleanup.
9.4. Changes since -03
9.5. Changes since -02
 The following changes have been made since the -02 draft.
 o Forbid persistent HTTP permissions.
 o Clarified the text in S 5.4 to clearly refer to requirements on
 the API to provide functionality to the site.
 o Fold in the IETF portion of draft-rescorla-rtcweb-generic-idp
 o Retarget the continuing consent section to assume Binding Requests
 o Added some more privacy and linkage text in various places.
 o Editorial improvements
10. References
10.1. Normative References
 [I-D.ietf-avtcore-6222bis]
 Begen, A., Perkins, C., Wing, D., and E. Rescorla,
 "Guidelines for Choosing RTP Control Protocol (RTCP)
 Canonical Names (CNAMEs)", draft-ietf-avtcore-6222bis-06
 (work in progress), July 2013.
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-rtp-usage]
 Perkins, C., Westerlund, M., and J. Ott, "Web Real-Time
 Communication (WebRTC): Media Transport and Use of RTP",
 draft-ietf-rtcweb-rtp-usage-15 (work in progress),
 May 2014.
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-security]
 Rescorla, E., "Security Considerations for WebRTC",
 draft-ietf-rtcweb-security-06 (work in progress),
 January 2014.
 [I-D.ietf-tsvwg-sctp-dtls-encaps]
 Tuexen, M., Stewart, R., Jesup, R., and S. Loreto, "DTLS
 Encapsulation of SCTP Packets",
 draft-ietf-tsvwg-sctp-dtls-encaps-04 (work in progress),
 May 2014.
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 [I-D.muthu-behave-consent-freshness]
 Perumal, M., Wing, D., R, R., and T. Reddy, "STUN Usage
 for Consent Freshness",
 draft-muthu-behave-consent-freshness-04 (work in
 progress), July 2013.
 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC2818] Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, May 2000.
 [RFC3711] Baugher, M., McGrew, D., Naslund, M., Carrara, E., and K.
 Norrman, "The Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)",
 RFC 3711, March 2004.
 [RFC4347] Rescorla, E. and N. Modadugu, "Datagram Transport Layer
 Security", RFC 4347, April 2006.
 [RFC4566] Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
 Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006.
 [RFC4572] Lennox, J., "Connection-Oriented Media Transport over the
 Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol in the Session
 Description Protocol (SDP)", RFC 4572, July 2006.
 [RFC4627] Crockford, D., "The application/json Media Type for
 JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)", RFC 4627, July 2006.
 [RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data
 Encodings", RFC 4648, October 2006.
 [RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
 Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.
 [RFC5245] Rosenberg, J., "Interactive Connectivity Establishment
 (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT)
 Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocols", RFC 5245,
 April 2010.
 [RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
 (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246, August 2008.
 [RFC5763] Fischl, J., Tschofenig, H., and E. Rescorla, "Framework
 for Establishing a Secure Real-time Transport Protocol
 (SRTP) Security Context Using Datagram Transport Layer
 Security (DTLS)", RFC 5763, May 2010.
 [RFC5764] McGrew, D. and E. Rescorla, "Datagram Transport Layer
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 Security (DTLS) Extension to Establish Keys for the Secure
 Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP)", RFC 5764, May 2010.
 [RFC5785] Nottingham, M. and E. Hammer-Lahav, "Defining Well-Known
 Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs)", RFC 5785,
 April 2010.
 [RFC5890] Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for
 Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework",
 RFC 5890, August 2010.
 [RFC6454] Barth, A., "The Web Origin Concept", RFC 6454,
 December 2011.
 [WebMessaging]
 Hickson, "HTML5 Web Messaging", May 2012,
 <http://www.w3.org/TR/2012/CR-webmessaging-20120501/>.
 [webcrypto]
 Dahl, Sleevi, "Web Cryptography API", June 2013.
 Available at http://www.w3.org/TR/WebCryptoAPI/
 [webrtc-api]
 Bergkvist, Burnett, Jennings, Narayanan, "WebRTC 1.0:
 Real-time Communication Between Browsers", October 2011.
 Available at
 http://dev.w3.org/2011/webrtc/editor/webrtc.html
10.2. Informative References
 [I-D.ietf-rtcweb-jsep]
 Uberti, J. and C. Jennings, "Javascript Session
 Establishment Protocol", draft-ietf-rtcweb-jsep-06 (work
 in progress), February 2014.
 [RFC2617] Franks, J., Hallam-Baker, P., Hostetler, J., Lawrence, S.,
 Leach, P., Luotonen, A., and L. Stewart, "HTTP
 Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication",
 RFC 2617, June 1999.
 [RFC3261] 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.
 [RFC5705] Rescorla, E., "Keying Material Exporters for Transport
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 Layer Security (TLS)", RFC 5705, March 2010.
 [RFC6265] Barth, A., "HTTP State Management Mechanism", RFC 6265,
 April 2011.
 [RFC6455] Fette, I. and A. Melnikov, "The WebSocket Protocol",
 RFC 6455, December 2011.
 [XmlHttpRequest]
 van Kesteren, A., "XMLHttpRequest Level 2", January 2012.
Appendix A. Example IdP Bindings to Specific Protocols
 [[TODO: These still need some cleanup.]]
 This section provides some examples of how the mechanisms described
 in this document could be used with existing authentication protocols
 such as BrowserID or OAuth. Note that this does not require browser-
 level support for either protocol. Rather, the protocols can be fit
 into the generic framework. (Though BrowserID in particular works
 better with some client side support).
A.1. BrowserID
 BrowserID [https://browserid.org/] is a technology which allows a
 user with a verified email address to generate an assertion
 (authenticated by their identity provider) attesting to their
 identity (phrased as an email address). The way that this is used in
 practice is that the relying party embeds JS in their site which
 talks to the BrowserID code (either hosted on a trusted intermediary
 or embedded in the browser). That code generates the assertion which
 is passed back to the relying party for verification. The assertion
 can be verified directly or with a Web service provided by the
 identity provider. It's relatively easy to extend this functionality
 to authenticate WebRTC calls, as shown below.
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 +----------------------+ +----------------------+
 | | | |
 | Alice's Browser | | Bob's Browser |
 | | OFFER ------------> | |
 | Calling JS Code | | Calling JS Code |
 | ^ | | ^ |
 | | | | | |
 | v | | v |
 | PeerConnection | | PeerConnection |
 | | ^ | | | ^ |
 | Finger| |Signed | |Signed | | |
 | print | |Finger | |Finger | |"Alice"|
 | | |print | |print | | |
 | v | | | v | |
 | +--------------+ | | +---------------+ |
 | | IdP Proxy | | | | IdP Proxy | |
 | | to | | | | to | |
 | | BrowserID | | | | BrowserID | |
 | | Signer | | | | Verifier | |
 | +--------------+ | | +---------------+ |
 | ^ | | ^ |
 +-----------|----------+ +----------|-----------+
 | |
 | Get certificate |
 v | Check
 +----------------------+ | certificate
 | | |
 | Identity |/-------------------------------+
 | Provider |
 | |
 +----------------------+
 The way this mechanism works is as follows. On Alice's side, Alice
 goes to initiate a call.
 1. The calling JS instantiates a PeerConnection and tells it that it
 is interested in having it authenticated via BrowserID (i.e., it
 provides "browserid.org" as the IdP name.)
 2. The PeerConnection instantiates the BrowserID signer in the IdP
 proxy
 3. The BrowserID signer contacts Alice's identity provider,
 authenticating as Alice (likely via a cookie).
 4. The identity provider returns a short-term certificate attesting
 to Alice's identity and her short-term public key.
 5. The Browser-ID code signs the fingerprint and returns the signed
 assertion + certificate to the PeerConnection.
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 6. The PeerConnection returns the signed information to the calling
 JS code.
 7. The signed assertion gets sent over the wire to Bob's browser
 (via the signaling service) as part of the call setup.
 The offer might look something like:
 {
 "type":"OFFER",
 "sdp":
 "v=0\n
 o=- 2890844526 2890842807 IN IP4 192.0.2.1\n
 s= \n
 c=IN IP4 192.0.2.1\n
 t=2873397496 2873404696\n
 a=fingerprint:SHA-1 ...\n
 4A:AD:B9:B1:3F:82:18:3B:54:02:12:DF:3E:5D:49:6B:19:E5:7C:AB\n
 a=identity [[base-64 encoding of identity assertion:
 {
 "idp":{ // Standardized
 "domain":"browserid.org",
 "method":"default"
 },
 // Assertion contents are browserid-specific
 "assertion": "{
 \"assertion\": {
 \"digest\":\"<hash of the SIGN message>\",
 \"audience\": \"<audience>\"
 \"valid-until\": 1308859352261,
 },
 \"certificate\": {
 \"email\": \"rescorla@example.org\",
 \"public-key\": \"<ekrs-public-key>\",
 \"valid-until\": 1308860561861,
 \"signature\": \"<signature from example.org>\"
 },
 \"content\": \"<content of the SIGN message>\"
 }"
 }
 ]]\n
 m=audio 49170 RTP/AVP 0\n
 ..."
 }
 Note that while the IdP here is specified as "browserid.org", the
 actual certificate is signed by example.org. This is because
 BrowserID is a combined authoritative/third-party system in which
 browserid.org delegates the right to be authoritative (what BrowserID
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Internet-Draft WebRTC Sec. Arch. July 2014
 calls primary) to individual domains.
 On Bob's side, he receives the signed assertion as part of the call
 setup message and a similar procedure happens to verify it.
 1. The calling JS instantiates a PeerConnection and provides it the
 relevant signaling information, including the signed assertion.
 2. The PeerConnection instantiates the IdP proxy which examines the
 IdP name and brings up the BrowserID verification code.
 3. The BrowserID verifier contacts the identity provider to verify
 the certificate and then uses the key to verify the signed
 fingerprint.
 4. Alice's verified identity is returned to the PeerConnection (it
 already has the fingerprint).
 5. At this point, Bob's browser can display a trusted UI indication
 that Alice is on the other end of the call.
 When Bob returns his answer, he follows the converse procedure, which
 provides Alice with a signed assertion of Bob's identity and keying
 material.
A.2. OAuth
 While OAuth is not directly designed for user-to-user authentication,
 with a little lateral thinking it can be made to serve. We use the
 following mapping of OAuth concepts to WebRTC concepts:
 +----------------------+----------------------+
 | OAuth | WebRTC |
 +----------------------+----------------------+
 | Client | Relying party |
 | Resource owner | Authenticating party |
 | Authorization server | Identity service |
 | Resource server | Identity service |
 +----------------------+----------------------+
 Table 1
 The idea here is that when Alice wants to authenticate to Bob (i.e.,
 for Bob to be aware that she is calling). In order to do this, she
 allows Bob to see a resource on the identity provider that is bound
 to the call, her identity, and her public key. Then Bob retrieves
 the resource from the identity provider, thus verifying the binding
 between Alice and the call.
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Internet-Draft WebRTC Sec. Arch. July 2014
 Alice IdP Bob
 ---------------------------------------------------------
 Call-Id, Fingerprint ------->
 <------------------- Auth Code
 Auth Code ---------------------------------------------->
 <----- Get Token + Auth Code
 Token --------------------->
 <------------- Get call-info
 Call-Id, Fingerprint ------>
 This is a modified version of a common OAuth flow, but omits the
 redirects required to have the client point the resource owner to the
 IdP, which is acting as both the resource server and the
 authorization server, since Alice already has a handle to the IdP.
 Above, we have referred to "Alice", but really what we mean is the
 PeerConnection. Specifically, the PeerConnection will instantiate an
 IFRAME with JS from the IdP and will use that IFRAME to communicate
 with the IdP, authenticating with Alice's identity (e.g., cookie).
 Similarly, Bob's PeerConnection instantiates an IFRAME to talk to the
 IdP.
Author's Address
 Eric Rescorla
 RTFM, Inc.
 2064 Edgewood Drive
 Palo Alto, CA 94303
 USA
 Phone: +1 650 678 2350
 Email: ekr@rtfm.com
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