Dear fellow SIP Implementors!

I hope this message on a technical list won't be viewed as spam or noise,
it's just our humble attempt to reach out to a broader audience.

First bit of background: myself and our team at Sippy have been around SIP
for 15+ years now, we have 2.5 of our own SIP implementations and are using
3-4 more to build our product and services. As such, we always saw a great
deal of value for ourselves and industry as a whole in the ongoing
interoperability testing, which culminated with us finally being able to
take part in the SIPIt 32 back in 2016. Suffice to say that we loved it!
And it was definitely worth both money and time spent down there.
Unfortunately for some reasons that are not entirely clear to us, that was
the last event of that nature in the long and fruitful series.

After some attempts to bring this up and hopefully spark a new interest
with some of the original SIPIt drivers, we have finally arrived at a
conclusion that "if not us, who else?". We had some initial discussion with
our fellow developers in the open source SIP community and it seems that
there is overall consensus that such an event is still very relevant. With
some amendments perhaps to make it more open and accessible. Subsequently
we reached an agreement with OpenSIPS team to co-host our first attempt to
organize a similar event, that we dubbed "OpenSIPIt", during OpenSIPS
Summit Distributed on 14-15 September, 2020. The main focus would be to get
our hands dirty and establish a format, however we also hope to pick some
low-hanging fruits by having few initial implementations of STIR/SHAKEN and
SHA-digest auth tested against each other.

At this point of time we have few teams that are interested, those are:
 - OpenSIPS Team led by Bogdan Iancu;
 - FreeSwitch/FusionPBX "Fan" Team led by Giovanni Maruzelli;
 - Python Sippy B2BUA Team lead by yours truly;
 - Go Sippy B2BUA Team lead by Andriy Pylypenko;
 - SIPP "Fan" Team lead by Pavel Bussel.

We would definitely love broader participation, and the only hard
requirement is having an open-source SIP implementation that you care about
enough to spend 6-8 hours over two days testing. If that sounds interesting
please let me know. Our plan is also to reach out to some of the other
well-known open source projects that are centered around SIP, but we also
understand that there are many more that we might not be aware of.

Thanks!

-Maksym
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