Minutes for CA/Browser Forum Teleconference – Oct. 12, 2017


Attendees: Arno Fiedler (D-TRUST), Atsushi Inaba (GlobalSign), Ben Wilson 
(DigiCert), Christopher Kemmerer (SSL.com), Connie Enke (SwissSign), Curt Spann 
(Apple), Devon O’Brien (Google), Doug Beattie (GlobalSign), Frank Corday 
(Trustwave), Gervase Markham (Mozilla), Li-Chun Chen (Chunghwa Telecom), Mike 
Reilly (Microsoft), Neil Dunbar (Trustcor), Patrick Tronnier (OATI), Peter 
Bowen (Amazon), Peter Miscovic (Disig), Robin Alden (Comodo), Ryan Sleevi 
(Google), Shelley Brewer (DigiCert), Sissel Hoel, (Buypass), Tim Shirley 
(Trustwave), Virginia Fournier (Apple), Wayne Thayer (GoDaddy), Wendy Brown 
(Federal PKI).



1.    Roll Call



2.    Read Antitrust Statement



3.    Review Agenda.  Agenda was approved.



4.    Governance Change Working Group update. Ben said the WG had a recent 
productive call and continued to go through Gerv’s comments, and that he had 
recently circulated an updated draft of Ballot 206 to the group.  There were a 
few open issues to finish, including updating the IPR Agreement to fit the new 
structure and voting rules at the Forum level.  On voting at the Forum level, 
choices include one person-one vote with no classes, or something else (such as 
one voting group being the producers of certificates, and another voting group 
being the consumers of certificates).  There was also the question of whether a 
majority vote would be sufficient at the Forum level, or a supermajority would 
be needed.  The WG wanted input from more of the members.



Kirk suggested the WG should poll the members on choices in the undecided open 
areas.  Gerv thought a 2/3 vote by groups at the Forum level might be a good 
idea to make sure something was strongly supported, but that could be 
burdensome if a clear majority wanted something over a period of time but could 
never get to 2/3; there are pros and cons of each.  Kirk noted the Forum itself 
will only decide limited matters such as chartering of new working groups and 
some administrative matters.



Virginia believed there needed to be at least two voting groups, and favored 
producers of certificates in one group and consumers of certificates in the 
other.  Curt supported this.  Ben said the WG would need to define “consumers” 
of certificates better to go in this direction – there is now a good definition 
of what a browser is, but “consumers” could be harder to define.  The IPR 
Agreement was discussed, with Kirk saying changes were needed so that a company 
that was a Forum member but did not participate in a particular working group 
would have no obligations under the IPR Agreement.  Virginia believes the IPR 
Agreement already provides for that.



Virginia said the WG also needed to draft an initial charter for a web server 
working group, which would take over the main work of the Forum under a new 
governance structure, and that we needed to add that to the same ballot as the 
governance changes so the Forum could continue its current work.  Ben said the 
server certificate working group charter was already drafted, and agreed to 
send it out to the WG immediately.



5.    Validation Working Group update.  No report.



6.    Policy Review Working Group update.  Ben said the WG just had a 
productive call where it reviewed the work at the F2F meeting.  The WG is still 
refining the definition of “Certificate Authority” in the BRs, and looking at 
whether Certificate Authority could include “logical entities” as used in the 
Network Security requirements – that’s still an open issue.  Maybe a definition 
using terms such as ”function” or “service” would work better.



As a separate matter, the WG had also reviewed the proposal at the F2F by 
Chunghwa Telecom to allow certificate policy OIDS when not doing web PKI.



7.    Network Security Working Group update.   Ben said the WG was looking for 
more “low hanging fruit” in the current NetSec requirements that could be 
improved by another quick ballot.  The WG also has a queue of issues of varying 
complexity that have been ranked by poll in order of importance, and was 
working through them.  At the F2F meeting, the WG had discussed again whether 
to scrap the existing NetSec requirements and rely instead on some other 
existing criteria, but had decided the answer was no because other available 
criteria were either too general or too specific for what the CA Forum members 
were doing.



Kirk asked if Ben had any idea of when the WG might be finished with its main 
issues list, and Ben guessed it might be a few months because the group only 
meets every other week.  The WG wants to do a risk analysis of CA systems 
generally in its approach, and reach agreement on what the NetSec requirements 
are really trying to protect, what the proper security perimeters for the 
standards should be, etc.



8.    F2F Meeting Follow-Up: Kirk again thanked Li-Chun and Chunghwa Telecom 
for hosting an excellent and fun F2F meeting in Taipei.  Gerv commended the 
hosts for the creativity in their “extra-curricular” activities, including the 
meeting with meteorite specialists, and suggested future hosts try to reach 
that level.  Kirk reminded some meeting participants that they still needed to 
post their portion of the Minutes on the wiki.



Ryan thanked the hosts for their work, but noted there were some communication 
issues for members who tried to participate remotely as he had.  He suggested 
that for future F2F meetings, the hosts should make certain that remote 
participation works, and suggested the Forum create some minimum hosting 
requirements (e.g., wifi bandwidth) and even bring some standard communications 
equipment owned by the Forum that could be plugged in and used at every meeting 
to improve communications.



Kirk liked the idea, but noted that even if hosts try very hard, they can’t 
always know or guarantee how well communications systems will work at the 
actual meetings.  Curt noted there is already a set of host requirements 
(located at the top of the Meetings page on the wiki), and said the list could 
be expanded and made more specific.  Ryan thought updating the list was a good 
idea, and suggested past hosts could update based on their experience.



Peter noted that the Forum was growing and it may become harder and harder for 
hosts to find the necessary space, layout, communications systems, etc. to meet 
our needs.  Gerv said perhaps the Forum would need to limit the number of 
participants in the future (e.g., no more than 2 per company) so the total 
number would not become too great.  He also asked for recommendations of 
possible “hardware” to purchase and bring to meetings, so we could have a 
standard “box” in the room with speaker, microphones, etc. with a standard plug 
in to a laptop and Skype, etc. so everyone participating remotely could hear.  
Peter noted there were typically more network problems than equipment problems 
at meetings creating the communications problems.  Gerv suggested maybe the 
Forum needed a long cable to connect its equipment directly to the internet to 
avoid the “last 10 feet” wifi problem.  Curt said that pre-determined equipment 
might be challenging for the host.



Ryan said the Forum’s growth might mean meetings need more bandwidth, and hosts 
may need to recognize that.  Curt said we might need to give hosts a metric of 
how much bandwidth was needed per attendee.  Peter noted Amazon is scheduled to 
be the next F2F host, and he would take the lead in updating hosting 
requirements on the wiki.



Kirk asked if the Taipei meeting sessions had been recorded; Ben said yes, but 
he hadn’t checked sound quality yet.  Kirk said it may be challenging to 
guarantee live participation would always work, but at least we could try to 
guarantee good recordings so those not present at the meetings could hear the 
discussion of issues.  He also noted it could be problematic if multiple remote 
people all wanted to speak in a meeting – it’s awkward shifting back and forth 
with people in the room.  Ryan said other groups like IETF successfully handle 
attendees who are both remote and physically present, and the Forum needed to 
change to accomplish this.



9.    Ballot Status.  Ryan said his proposed ballot requiring CAs to use RFC 
3647 format after six months would start soon – he had delayed it because of 
all the other ballots that were proceeding.  Kirk asked if later the Forum 
should work on possible changes to the RFC 3647 format itself, as many of the 
RFC 3647 headings in in RFC 3647 are odd or inappropriate, but Ryan said he 
didn’t think that would be worthwhile.  Ben said he had two ballots coming - 
Ballot 208 on dnQualifiers and Ballot 209 on EV Liability.



10.  Future F2F Schedule: Kirk reviewed the following schedule of F2F meetings, 
and asked members who were willing to host in June and October 2019 to contact 
him.



Future F2F schedule:

March 6-8, 2018: Amazon, Herndon, VA USA

June 2018: Comodo, London

Sept.-Oct. 2018: China (TBD)

Feb.-Mar. 2019: Cupertino, CA, USA (tentative)

June / Oct. 2019:



11.  Any Other Business.  There was no other business.



12.  Next call October 26, 2017.



13.  Adjourn







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