When in Washington...
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 11/22/99
The Internet Engineering Task Force went to Washington, D.C.,
earlier this month and did what the Washingtonians do most often
- played politics.
We tried to figure out if we should put special features into our
protocols to support wiretapping and other legal intercept
methods. My view is that we came away with little support for the
idea that the IETF should go out of its way to support legal
intercept. But at the same time, there was not a consensus that
we should prohibit all discussion of the topic.
The issue of the IETF doing work on legal intercept technologies
came up as a byproduct of the extensive work that the IETF is now
doing in the area of IP-based telephony. It should not come as a
surprise that in many places around the world, including the
U.S., telephone companies must be able to provide law enforcement
with information about phone calls, such as who is calling whom
and how long the call is, along with the audio stream from
selected calls. Companies that build telephone equipment feel
they must add features to their equipment to support these
activities because their customers must be able to access such
features.
Some traditional telephony standards organizations have supported
this by adding intercept features to their telephony-related
standards. Because the future of the telephone seems to be
intertwined with the Internet, it is inevitable that the primary
Internet standards organization would be faced with the issue
sooner or later.
In the IETF's case, some participants in one of the working
groups focusing on a new standard for communication between
components of a distributed phone switch brought up the
wiretapping issue. (Not the FBI, as was reported in some places.)
Because adding features to support wiretapping would be an
important change in direction, the IETF's management decided to
have a public discussion before determining if the working group
should go ahead.
A new mailing list was created
(www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/raven) for this discussion. Close
to 500 people subscribed to the list and about 10% of those sent
at least one message to the list. The discussion on this list was
a precursor to one held during the IETF plenary in Washington.
Twenty-nine people spoke during the plenary session. Opinions
ranged from libertarian ("governments have no right to
wiretap") to pragmatic ("it will be done somewhere, so
best have it done where the technology was developed.") At
the end of the discussion, there was a show of hands to indicate
opinions: Should the IETF add special features, not do this or
abstain? There was not much support for adding the intercept
features, but enough people abstained that the IETF could not
gauge a rough consensus (80% or more) against all such
activities.
This was an interesting example of participatory democracy, and
like many others, did not produce a clear result.
Disclaimer: Harvard has watched various forms of government come
and go, and did not express an opinion on this issue.