One document matched: draft-ietf-eai-framework-04.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-eai-framework-03.txt
Email Address Internationalization J. Klensin
(EAI)
Internet-Draft Y. Ko
Intended status: Informational ICU
Expires: June 16, 2007 December 13, 2006
Overview and Framework for Internationalized Email
draft-ietf-eai-framework-04.txt
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2006).
Abstract
Full use of electronic mail throughout the world requires that people
be able to use their own names, written correctly in their own
languages and scripts, as mailbox names in email addresses. This
document introduces a series of specifications that define mechanisms
and protocol extensions needed to fully support internationalized
email addresses. These changes include an SMTP extension and
extension of email header syntax to accommodate UTF-8 data. The
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document set also includes discussion of key assumptions and issues
in deploying fully internationalized email.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Role of This Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. Problem statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.3. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Overview of the Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3. Document Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4. Overview of Protocol Extensions and Changes . . . . . . . . . 7
4.1. SMTP Extension for Internationalized Email Address . . . . 7
4.2. Transmission of Email Header Fields in UTF-8 Encoding . . 9
4.3. Downgrading Mechanism for Backward Compatibility . . . . . 9
5. Downgrading Before and After SMTP Transactions . . . . . . . . 10
5.1. Downgrading Before or During Message Submission . . . . . 10
5.2. Downgrading or Other Processing After Final SMTP
Delivery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
6. Additional Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
6.1. Impact on URIs and IRIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
6.2. Interaction with delivery notifications . . . . . . . . . 11
6.3. Use of email addresses as identifiers . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.4. Encoded words, signed messages and downgrading . . . . . . 12
6.5. Other Uses of Local Parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.6. Non-standard Encapsulation Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7. Experimental Targets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
11. Change History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11.1. draft-klensin-ima-framework: Version 00 . . . . . . . . . 16
11.2. draft-klensin-ima-framework: Version 01 . . . . . . . . . 16
11.3. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 00 . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11.4. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 01 . . . . . . . . . . . 17
11.5. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 02 . . . . . . . . . . . 17
11.6. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 03 . . . . . . . . . . . 18
11.7. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 04 . . . . . . . . . . . 18
12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
12.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 23
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1. Introduction
In order to use internationalized email addresses, we need to
internationalize both the domain part and the local part of email
addresses. The domain part of email addresses is already
internationalized [RFC3490], while the local part is not. Without
the extensions specified in this document, the mailbox name is
restricted to a subset of 7-bit ASCII [RFC2821]. Though MIME
[RFC2045] enables the transport of non-ASCII data, it does not
provide a mechanism for internationalized email addresses. In RFC
2047 [RFC2047], MIME defines an encoding mechanism for some specific
message header fields to accommodate non-ASCII data. However, it
does not permit the use of email addresses that include non-ASCII
characters. Without the extensions defined here, or some equivalent
set, the only way to incorporate non-ASCII characters in any part of
email addresses is to use RFC2047 coding to embed them in what RFC
2822 [RFC2822] calls the "display name" (known as a "name phrase" or
by other terms elsewhere) of the relevant headers. Information coded
into the display name is invisible in the message envelope and, for
many purposes, is not part of the address at all.
1.1. Role of This Specification
This document presents the overview and framework for an approach to
the next stage of email internationalization. This new stage
requires not only internationalization of addresses and headers, but
also associated transport and delivery models. [[anchor1:
Placeholder: The history of developments and design ideas leading to
this specification is described in.]]
This document describes how the various elements of email
internationalization fit together and describes the relationships
among the various documents involved.
1.2. Problem statement
IDNA [RFC3490] permits internationalized domain names, but deployment
has not yet reached most users. One of the reasons for this is that
we do not yet have fully internationalized naming schemes. Domain
names are just one of the various names and identifiers that are
required to be internationalized. In many contexts, until more of
those identifiers are internationalized, internationalized domain
names alone have little value.
Email addresses are prime examples of why it is not good enough to
just internationalize the domain name. As most of us have learned
from experience, users strongly prefer email addresses that resemble
names or initials to those involving seemingly meaningless strings of
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letters or numbers. Unless the entire email address can use familiar
characters and formats, users will perceive email as being culturally
unfriendly. If the names and initials used in email addresses can be
expressed in the native languages and writing systems of the users,
the Internet will be perceived as more natural, especially by those
whose native language is not written in a subset of a Roman-derived
script.
Internationalization of email addresses is not merely a matter of
changing the SMTP envelope; or of modifying the From, To, and Cc
headers; or of permitting upgraded mail user agents (MUAs) to decode
a special coding and respond by displaying local characters. To be
perceived as usable, the addresses must be internationalized and
handled consistently in all of the contexts in which they occur.
This requirement has far-reaching implications: collections of
patches and workarounds are not adequate. Even if they were
adequate, a workaround-based approach may result in an assortment of
implementations with different sets of patches and workarounds having
been applied with consequent user confusion about what is actually
usable and supported. Instead, we need to build a fully
internationalized email environment, focusing on permitting efficient
communication among those who share a language or other community.
That, in turn, implies changes to the mail header environment to
permit the full range of Unicode characters where that makes sense,
an SMTP extension to permit UTF-8 [RFC3629] mail addressing and
delivery of those extended headers, and (finally) a requirement for
support of the 8BITMIME SMTP Extension [RFC1652] so that all of these
can be transported through the mail system without having to overcome
the limitation that headers not have content-transfer-encodings.
1.3. Terminology
This document assumes a reasonable understanding of the protocols and
terminology of the core email standards as documented in [RFC2821]
and [RFC2822].
Much of the description in this document depends on the abstractions
of "Mail Transfer Agent" ("MTA") and "Mail User Agent" ("MUA").
However, it is important to understand that those terms and the
underlying concepts postdate the design of the Internet's email
architecture and the application of the "protocols on the wire"
principle to it. That email architecture, as it has evolved, and the
"wire" principle have prevented any strong and standardized
distinctions about how MTAs and MUAs interact on a given origin or
destination host (or even whether they are separate).
[[anchor3: WGLC, Framework 5, Issue #1391]] However, the term "final
delivery MTA" is used in this document in a fashion equivalent to the
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term "delivery system" or "final delivery system" of RFC 2821. This
is the SMTP server that controls the format of local parts of
addresses and is permitted to inspect and interpret them. It
receives messages from the network for delivery to mailboxes or other
local processing, including any forwarding or aliasing that changes
envelope addresses, rather than relaying. From the perspective of
the network, any local delivery arrangements such as saving to a
message store, handoff to specific message delivery programs or
agents, and mechanisms for retrieving messages are all "behind" the
final delivery MTA and hence not part of the SMTP transport or
delivery process.
In this document, an address is "all-ASCII", or just an "ASCII
address", if every character in the address is in the ASCII character
repertoire [ASCII]; an address is "non-ASCII", or an "i18n-address",
if any character is not in the ASCII character repertoire. Such
addresses may be restricted in other ways, but those restrictions are
not relevant to this definition. The term "all-ASCII" is also
applied to other protocol elements when the distinction is important,
with "non-ASCII" or "internationalized" as its opposite.
The umbrella term to describe the email address internationalization
specified by this document and its companion documents is "UTF8SMTP".
For example, an address permitted by this specification is referred
to as a "UTF8SMTP (compliant) address".
Please note that according to the definitions given here the set of
all "all-ASCII" addresses and the set of all "non-ASCII" addresses
are mutually exclusive. The set of all UTF8SMTP addresses is the
union of these two sets.
An "ASCII user" (i) exclusively uses email addresses that contain
ASCII characters only, and (ii) cannot generate recipient addresses
that contain non-ASCII characters.
An "i18mail user" has one or more non-ASCII email addresses. Such a
user may have ASCII addresses too; if the user has more than one
email account and corresponding address, or more than one alias for
the same address, he or she has some method to choose which address
to use on outgoing email. Note that under this definition, it is not
possible to tell from the address that an email sender or recipient
is an i18mail user. There is no such thing as an "i18mail message";
the term applies only to users and their agents and capabilities.
A "message" is sent from one user (sender) using a particular email
address to one or more other recipient email addresses (often
referred to just as "users" or "recipient users").
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A "mailing list" is a mechanism whereby a message may be distributed
to multiple recipients by sending to one recipient address. An agent
(typically not a human being) at that single address then causes the
message to be redistributed to the target recipients. This agent
sets the envelope return address of the redistributed message to a
different address from that of the original single recipient message.
Using a different envelope return address (reverse-path) causes error
(and other automatically generated) messages to go to an error
handling address.
[[anchor4: WGLC, Framework 4.1, issue #1389]] As specified in RFC
2821, a message that is undeliverable for some reason is expected to
result in notification to the sender. This can occur in either of
two ways. One, typically called "Rejection", occurs when an SMTP
server returns a reply code indicating a fatal error (a "5yz" code)
or persistently returns a temporary failure error (a "4yz" code).
The other involves accepting the message during SMTP processing and
then generating a message to the sender, typically known as a "Non-
delivery notification" or "NDN". Current practice often favors
rejection over NDNs because of the reduced likelihood that the
generation of NDNs will be used as a spamming technique. The latter,
NDN, case is unavoidable if an intermediate MTA accepts a message
that is then rejected by the next-hop server.
The pronouns "he" and "she" are used interchangeably to indicate a
human of indeterminate gender.
The key words "MUST", "SHALL", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "RECOMMENDED",
and "MAY" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC
2119 [RFC2119].
2. Overview of the Approach
This set of specifications changes both SMTP and the format of email
headers to permit non-ASCII characters to be represented directly.
Each important component of the work is described in a separate
document. The document set, whose members are described in the next
section, also contains informational documents whose purpose is to
provide implementation suggestions and guidance for the protocols.
3. Document Plan
In addition to this document, the following documents make up this
specification and provide advice and context for it.
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o SMTP extensions. This document [EAI-SMTPext] provides an SMTP
extension for internationalized addresses, as provided for in RFC
2821.
o Email headers in UTF-8. This document [EAI-UTF8] essentially
updates RFC 2822 to permit some information in email headers to be
expressed directly by Unicode characters encoded in UTF-8 when the
SMTP extension described above is used. [[anchor6: WGLC, Framework
3, issue #1388]] This document, possibly with one or more
supplemental ones, will also need to address the interactions with
MIME, including relationships between UTF8SMTP and internal MIME
headers and content types.
o In-transit downgrading from internationalized addressing with the
SMTP extension and UTF-8 headers to traditional email formats and
characters [EAI-downgrade]. Downgrading either at the point of
message origination or after the mail has successfully been
received by a final delivery SMTP server involve different
constraints and possibilities; see Section 4.3 and Section 5,
below. Processing that occurs after such final delivery,
primarily that involved with the delivery to a mailbox or message
store is sometimes called "Message Delivery" processing.
o Extensions to the IMAP protocol to support internationalized
headers [EAI-imap].
o Parallel extensions to the POP protocol [EAI-pop].
o Description of internationalization changes for delivery
notifications (DSNs) [EAI-DSN].
o Scenarios for the use of these protocols [EAI-scenarios].
4. Overview of Protocol Extensions and Changes
4.1. SMTP Extension for Internationalized Email Address
An SMTP extension, "UTF8SMTP" is specified that
o Permits the use of UTF-8 strings in email addresses, both local
parts and domain names.
o Permits the selective use of UTF-8 strings in email headers (see
the next subsection).
o Requires that the server advertise the 8BITMIME extension
[RFC1652] and that the client support 8-bit transmission so that
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header information can be transmitted without using a special
content-transfer-encoding.
o Provides information to support downgrading mechanisms.
Some general principles apply to this work.
1. Email addresses enter subsystems (such as a user interface) that
may perform charset conversions or other encoding changes. When
the left hand side of the address includes characters outside the
US-ASCII character repertoire, use of punycode on the right hand
side is discouraged to promote consistent processing of
characters throughout the address.
2. An SMTP relay must
* Either recognize the format explicitly, agreeing to do so via
an ESMTP option,
* Select and use an ASCII-only address, downgrading other
information as needed (see Section 4.3), or
* Reject the message or, if necessary, return a non-delivery
notification message, so that the sender can make another
plan.
If the message cannot be forwarded because the next-hop system
cannot accept the extension and insufficient information is
available to reliably downgrade it, it MUST be rejected or a non-
delivery message generated and sent. [[anchor8: WGLC, issue 1389
and others, "Framework 4.1": Strengthen the restriction here so
that the message must be rejected unless the MTA has full
knowledge??]]
3. In the interest of interoperability, charsets other than UTF-8
are prohibited in mail addresses and headers. There is no
practical way to identify them properly with an extension similar
to this without introducing great complexity.
Conformance to the group of standards specified here for email
transport and delivery requires implementation of the SMTP Extension
specification, including recognition of the keywords associated with
alternate addresses, and the UTF-8 Header specification. Support for
downgrading is not required, but, if implemented, MUST be implemented
as specified. Similarly, if the system implements IMAP it MUST
conform to the i18n IMAP specification and similarly for POP.
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4.2. Transmission of Email Header Fields in UTF-8 Encoding
There are many places in MUAs or in user presentation in which email
addresses or domain names appear. Examples include the conventional
From, To, or Cc header fields; Message-ID and In-Reply-To header
fields that normally contain domain names (but that may be a special
case); and in message bodies. Each of these must be examined from an
internationalization perspective. The user will expect to see
mailbox and domain names in local characters, and to see them
consistently. If non-obvious encodings, such as protocol-specific
ASCII-Compatible Encoding (ACE) variants, are used, the user will
inevitably, if only occasionally, see them rather than "native"
characters and will find that discomfiting or astonishing.
Similarly, if different codings are used for mail transport and
message bodies, the user is particularly likely to be surprised, if
only as a consequence of the long-established "things leak"
principle. The only practical way to avoid these sources of
discomfort, in both the medium and the longer term, is to have the
encodings used in transport be as nearly as possible the same as the
encodings used in message headers and message bodies.
It seems clear that the point at which email local parts are
internationalized is the point that email headers should simply be
shifted to a full internationalized form, presumably using UTF-8
rather than ASCII as the base character set for other than protocol
elements such as the header field names themselves. The transition
to that model includes support for address, and address-related,
fields within the headers of legacy systems. This is done by
extending the encoding models of [RFC2045] and [RFC2231]. However,
our target should be fully internationalized headers, as discussed in
[EAI-UTF8].
4.3. Downgrading Mechanism for Backward Compatibility
As with any use of the SMTP extension mechanism, there is always the
possibility of a client that requires the feature encountering a
server that does not support the required feature. In the case of
email address and header internationalization, the risk should be
minimized by the fact that the selection of submission servers are
presumably under the control of the sender's client and the selection
of potential intermediate relays is under the control of the
administration of the final delivery server.
For situations in which a client encounters a server that does not
support UTF8SMTP, there are basically two possibilities:
o Reject the message or generate and send a non-delivery message,
requiring the sender to resubmit it with traditional-format
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addresses and headers.
o Figure out a way to downgrade the envelope or message body in
transit. Especially when internationalized addresses are
involved, downgrading will require that all-ASCII addresses be
obtained from some source. An optional extension parameter is
provided as a way of transmitting an alternate address. Downgrade
issues and a specification are discussed in [EAI-downgrade].
The first of these two options, that of rejecting or returning the
message to the sender MAY always be chosen.
There is also a third case, one in which the client is UTF8SMTP-
capable, the server is not, but the message does not require the
extended capabilities. In other words, both the addresses in the
envelope and the entire set of headers of the message are entirely in
ASCII (perhaps including encoded words in the headers). In that
case, the client SHOULD send the message whether or not the server
announces the capability specified here.
5. Downgrading Before and After SMTP Transactions
In addition to the in-transit downgrades discussed above, downgrading
may also occur before or during initial message submission or after
delivery to the final delivery MTA. Because these cases have a
different set of available information from in-transit cases, the
constraints and opportunities may be somewhat different too. These
two cases are discussed in the subsections below.
5.1. Downgrading Before or During Message Submission
Perhaps obviously, the most convenient time to find an ASCII address
corresponding to an internationalized address, or to convert a
message from the internationalized form into conventional ASCII form,
is at the originating MUA, either before the message is sent or after
the internationalized form of the message is rejected, or non-
delivery message generated and sent, by some MTA in the path to the
presumed destination. At that point, the user has a full range of
choices available, including contacting the intended recipient out of
band for an alternate address, consulting appropriate directories,
arranging for translation of both addresses and message content into
a different language, and so on. While it is natural to think of
message downgrading as optimally being a fully-automated process, we
should not underestimate the capabilities of a user of at least
moderate intelligence who wishes to communicate with another such
user.
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In this context, one can easily imagine modifications to message
submission servers (as described in [RFC4409]) so that they would
perform downgrading, or perhaps even upgrading, operations, receiving
messages with one or more of the internationalization extensions
discussed here and adapting the outgoing message, as needed, to
respond to the delivery or next-hop environment it encounters.
5.2. Downgrading or Other Processing After Final SMTP Delivery
When an email message is received by a final delivery SMTP server, it
is usually stored in some form. Then it is retrieved either by
software that reads the stored form directly or by client software
via some email retrieval mechanisms such as POP or IMAP.
The SMTP extension described in Section 4.1 provides protection only
in transport. It does not prevent MUAs and email retrieval
mechanisms that have not been upgraded to understand
internationalized addresses and UTF-8 headers from accessing stored
internationalized emails.
Since the final delivery SMTP server (or, to be more specific, its
corresponding mail storage agent) cannot safely assume that agents
accessing email storage will always be capable of handling the
extensions proposed here, it MAY either downgrade internationalized
emails or specially identify messages that utilize these extensions,
or both. If this done, the final delivery SMTP server SHOULD include
a mechanism to preserve or recover the original internationalized
forms without information loss to support access by UTF8SMTP-aware
agents.
6. Additional Issues
This section identifies issues that are not covered as part of this
set of specifications, but that will need to be considered as part of
deployment of email address and header internationalization.
6.1. Impact on URIs and IRIs
[[anchor12: WGLC issue 1396: title change]] The mailto: schema
defined in [RFC2368] and discussed in IRI [RFC3987] may need to be
modified when this work is completed and standardized.
6.2. Interaction with delivery notifications
The advent of UTF8SMTP will make necessary consideration of the
interaction with delivery notification mechanisms, including the SMTP
extension for requesting delivery notifications [RFC3461], and the
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format of delivery notifications [RFC3464]. These issues are
discussed in a forthcoming document that will update those RFCs as
needed [EAI-DSN].
6.3. Use of email addresses as identifiers
There are a number of places in contemporary Internet usage in which
email addresses are used as identifiers for individuals, including as
identifiers to web servers supporting some electronic commerce sites.
These documents do not address those uses, but it is reasonable to
expect that some difficulties will be encountered when
internationalized addresses are first used in those contexts, many of
which cannot even handle the full range of addresses permitted today.
6.4. Encoded words, signed messages and downgrading
One particular characteristic of the email format is its persistency:
MUAs are expected to handle messages that were originally sent
decades ago and not just those delivered seconds ago. As such, MUAs
and mail filtering software, such as that specified in SIEVE
[RFC3028], will need to continue to accept and decode header fields
that use the "encoded word" mechanism [RFC2047] to accommodate non-
ASCII characters in some header fields. While extensions to both
POP3 and IMAP have been proposed to enable automatic EAI-upgrade --
including RFC 2047 decoding -- of messages by the POP3 or IMAP
server, there are message structures and MIME content-types for which
that cannot be done or where the change would have unacceptable side-
effects.
For example, message parts that are cryptographically signed using,
e.g., S/MIME [RFC3851] [[anchor14: WGLC issue 1395]] or PGP
[RFC3156], cannot be upgraded from RFC 2047 form to normal UTF-8
characters without breaking the signature. Similarly, message parts
that are encrypted may contain, when decrypted, header fields that
use the RFC 2047 encoding; such messages cannot be 'fully' upgraded
without access to cryptographic keys.
Similar issues may arise if signed messages are downgraded in transit
[EAI-downgrade] and then an attempt is made to upgrade them to the
original form and then verify the signatures. Even the very subtle
changes that may result from algorithms to downgrade and then upgrade
again may be sufficient to invalidate the signatures if they impact
either the primary or MIME bodypart headers. When signatures are
present, downgrading must be performed with extreme care if at all.
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6.5. Other Uses of Local Parts
[[anchor16: WGLC, "Framework 7": This section tentatively added to
keep track of the relevant text. There may not be consensus for it
in this form (or at all).]] Local parts are sometimes used to
construct domain labels, e.g. the local part "user" in the address
user@domain.example could be converted into a vanity host
user.domain.example with Web space at <http://user.domain.example>
and catchall addresses any.thing.goes@user.domain.example.
Such schemes are obviously limited by among others the SMTP rules for
domain names, and will not work without further restrictions for
other local parts such as the <utf8-local-part> specified in
[EAI-UTF8]. Whether this issue is relevant to these specifications
is an open question. It may be simply another case of the
considerable flexibility accorded to delivery MTAs in determining the
mailbox names they will accept and how they are interpreted.
6.6. Non-standard Encapsulation Formats
[[anchor18: WGLC, "Framework 3": This section tentatively added to
keep track of the relevant text. There may not be consensus for it
in this form (or at all).]] Some applications use formats similar to
the application/mbox format defined in [RFC4155] instead of the
message/digest RFC 2046, Section 5.1.5 [RFC2046] form to transfer
multiple messages as single units. Insofar as such applications
assume that all stored messages use the message/rfc822 RFC 2046,
Section 5.2.1 [RFC2046] format with US-ASCII headers, they are not
ready for the extensions specified in this series of documents and
special measures may be needed to properly detect and process them.
7. Experimental Targets
In addition to the simple question of whether the model outlined here
can be made to work in a satisfactory way for upgraded systems and
provide adequate protection for un-upgraded ones, we expect that
actually working with the systems will provide answers to two
additional questions: what restrictions such as character lists or
normalization should be placed, if any, on the characters that are
permitted to be used in address local-parts and how useful, in
practice, will downgrading turn out to be given whatever restrictions
and constraints that must be placed upon it.
8. IANA Considerations
This overview description and framework document does not contemplate
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any IANA registrations or other actions. Some of the documents in
the group have their own IANA considerations sections and
requirements.
9. Security Considerations
Any expansion of permitted characters and encoding forms in email
addresses raises some risks. There have been discussions on so
called "IDN-spoofing" or "IDN homograph attacks". These attacks
allow an attacker (or "phisher") to spoof the domain or URLs of
businesses. The same kind of attack is also possible on the local
part of internationalized email addresses. It should be noted that
one of the proposed fixes for, e.g., domain names in URLs, does not
work for email local parts since they are case-sensitive. That fix
involves forcing all elements that are displayed to be in lower-case
and normalized.
Since email addresses are often transcribed from business cards and
notes on paper, they are subject to problems arising from confusable
characters (see [RFC4690]). These problems are somewhat reduced if
the domain associated with the mailbox is unambiguous and supports a
relatively small number of mailboxes whose names follow local system
conventions; they are increased with very large mail systems in which
users can freely select their own addresses.
The internationalization of email addresses and headers must not
leave the Internet less secure than it is that without the required
extensions. The requirements and mechanisms documented in this set
of specifications do not, in general, raise any new security issues.
[[anchor21: WGLC issue 1397: material below rewritten slightly.]]
They do require a review of issues associated with confusable
characters -- a topic that is being explored thoroughly elsewhere
(see, e.g., [RFC4690]) -- and, potentially, some issues with UTF-8
normalization, discussed in [RFC3629], and other transformations.
Normalization and other issues associated with transformations and
standard forms are also part of the subject of ongoing work discussed
in [Net-Unicode], in [IDNAbis-BIDI] and elsewhere. Some issues
specifically related to internationalized addresses and headers are
discussed in more detail in the other documents in this set.
However, in particular, caution should be taken that any
"downgrading" mechanism, or use of downgraded addresses, does not
inappropriately assume authenticated bindings between the
internationalized and ASCII addresses.
The new UTF-8 header and message formats might also raise, or
aggravate, another known issue. If the model creates new forms of
'invalid' or 'malformed' message, then a new email attack is created:
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in an effort to be robust, some or or most agents will accept such
message and interpret them as if they were well-formed. If a filter
interprets such a message differently than then final MUA, then it
may be possible to create a message which appears acceptable under
the filter's interpretation but which should be rejected under the
interpretation given it by the final MUA. Such attacks already exist
for existing messages and encoding layers, e.g., invalid MIME syntax,
invalid HTML markup, and invalid coding of particular image types.
Models for "downgrading" of messages or addresses from UTF-8 form to
some ASCII form, including those described in [EAI-downgrade], pose
another special problem and risk: any system that transforms one
address or set of mail header fields into another becomes a point at
which spoofing attacks can occur and those who wish to spoof messages
might be able to do so by imitating a message downgraded from one
with a legitimate original address.
In addition, email addresses are used in many contexts other than
sending mail, such as for identifiers under various circumstances
(see Section 6.3). Each of those contexts will need to be evaluated,
in turn, to determine whether the use of non-ASCII forms is
appropriate and what particular issues they raise.
This work will clearly impact any systems or mechanisms that are
dependent on digital signatures or similar integrity protection for
mail headers (see also the discussion in Section 6.4). Many
conventional uses of PGP and S/MIME are not affected since they are
used to sign body parts but not headers. On the other hand, the
developing work on domain keys identified mail (DKIM [DKIM-Charter])
will eventually need to consider this work and vice versa: while this
experiment does not propose to address or solve the issues raised by
DKIM and other signed header mechanisms, the issues will have to be
coordinated and resolved eventually.
10. Acknowledgements
This document, and the related ones, were originally derived from
drafts by John Klensin and the JET group [Klensin-emailaddr],
[JET-IMA]. The work drew inspiration from discussions on the "IMAA"
mailing list, sponsored by the Internet Mail Consortium and
especially from an early draft by Paul Hoffman and Adam Costello
[Hoffman-IMAA] that attempted to define an MUA-only solution to the
address internationalization problem.
More recent drafts have benefited from considerable discussion within
the IETF EAI Working Group and especially from suggestions and text
provided by Martin Duerst, Frank Ellermann, Philip Guenther, Kari
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Hurtta, and Alexey Melnikov, and from extended discussions among the
editors and authors of the core documents cited in Section 3: Harald
Alvestrand, Kazunori Fujiwara, Chris Newman, Pete Resnick, Jiankang
Yao, Jeff Yeh, and Yoshiro Yoneya.
11. Change History
[[anchor24: This section to be restructured prior to publication. It
may be useful to retain parts of it to facilitate establishing dates
and documents for the history of this work.]]
This document has evolved through several titles as well as the usual
version numbers. The list below tries to trace that thread as well
as changes within the substance of the document. The first document
of the series was posted as draft-klensin-emailaddr-i18n-00.txt in
October 2003.
11.1. draft-klensin-ima-framework: Version 00
This version supercedes draft-lee-jet-ima-00 and
draft-klensin-emailaddr-i18n-03. It represents a major rewrite and
change of architecture from the former and incorporates many ideas
and some text from the latter.
11.2. draft-klensin-ima-framework: Version 01
o Some clarifications of terminology (more to follow) and general
editorial improvements.
o Upgrades to reflect discussions during IETF 64.
o Improved treatment of downgrading before and after message
transport.
11.3. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 00
This version supercedes draft-klensin-ima-framework-01; its file name
should represent the form to be used until the IETF email address and
header internationalization ("EAI") work concludes.
o Changed "display name" terminology to be consistent with RFC 2822.
Also clarified some other terminology issues.
o Added a comment about the possible role of MessageSubmission
servers in downgrading.
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o Removed the "IMA" terminology, converting it to either "EAI" or
prose.
o Per meeting and mailing list discussion, added conformance
statements about bouncing if neither forwarding nor downgrading
were possible and about implementation requirements.
o Updated several references. Some documents are still tentative.
o Fixed many typographical errors.
11.4. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 01
o Added comments about PGP, S/MIME, and DKIM to Security
Considerations
o Rationalized terminology and included terminology from scenarios
document.
11.5. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 02
o Clarified comment about IRIs and MAILTO.
o Identified issue with S/MIME and PGP for encapsulated content.
o Added note about the definitive "UTF8SMTP" terminology.
o Removed mail exploder related discussions and reference.
o Adjusted some requirement levels.
o Removed computed ASCII address (aka ATOMIC) related discussion.
o Added a section about delivery notifications and created a pointer
to a new document about them.
o Added a new section noting the use of email addresses as
identifiers.
o Added a new section discussing implications of downgrading to
digital signatures on messages.
o Many editorial revisions, corrections to references, etc.,
including moving the references to the other documents in the
series to "informative" -- this document does not depend on them
for a specification and is, itself, intended to be Informational.
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11.6. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 03
o Revised the material in the "document plan" that introduces the
"MDA" terminology.
o Added definitions for "reject", and "non-delivery message" ("NDN")
and removed the term "bounce" from the document.
o Removed the "Internationalization Considerations" section as
pointless and silly. [[anchor31: WGLC, Framework 6, Issue 1392.]]
o Several references corrected and other small text clarifications
inserted in response to WG Last Call comments.
o Modified the references to EAI WG drafts to use "EAI-" rather than
"I18Nemail-" to reduce the chances for confusion.
o Added placeholders for unresolved WG Last Call issues and notes on
significant changes made during WG Last Call (marked "WGLC" with
issues entered into the tracker identified by issue number)
o Incorporated extensive editorial clarifications from Randy Gellens
into Section 1.
11.7. draft-ietf-eai-framework: Version 04
o Corrected the description of header fields that must be examined.
o Added a note to "Security Considerations" about spoofing risks
associated with downgrading.
o Several typographic, editorial, and small definitional
corrections.
12. References
12.1. Normative References
[ASCII] American National Standards Institute (formerly United
States of America Standards Institute), "USA Code for
Information Interchange", ANSI X3.4-1968, 1968.
ANSI X3.4-1968 has been replaced by newer versions with
slight modifications, but the 1968 version remains
definitive for the Internet.
[RFC1652] Klensin, J., Freed, N., Rose, M., Stefferud, E., and D.
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Crocker, "SMTP Service Extension for 8bit-MIMEtransport",
RFC 1652, July 1994.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels'", RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2821] Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 2821,
April 2001.
[RFC3490] Faltstrom, P., Hoffman, P., and A. Costello,
"Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications (IDNA)",
RFC 3490, March 2003.
[RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
12.2. Informative References
[DKIM-Charter]
IETF, "Domain Keys Identified Mail (dkim)", October 2006,
<http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/dkim-charter.html>.
[EAI-DSN] Newman, C., "UTF-8 Delivery and Disposition Notification",
draft-ietf-eai-dsn-00 (work in progress), January 2007.
This document is under development by the WG. The date
given is an estimate for a version ready for posting.
[EAI-SMTPext]
Yao, J., Ed. and W. Mao, Ed., "SMTP extension for
internationalized email address",
draft-ietf-eai-smtpext-01 (work in progress), July 2006.
[EAI-UTF8]
Yeh, J., "Internationalized Email Headers",
draft-ietf-eai-utf8headers-01.txt (work in progress),
August 2006.
[EAI-downgrade]
YONEYA, Y., Ed. and K. Fujiwara, Ed., "Downgrading
mechanism for Internationalized eMail Address (IMA)",
draft-ietf-eai-downgrade-02 (work in progress),
August 2005.
[EAI-imap]
Resnick, P. and C. Newman, "IMAP Support for UTF-8",
draft-ietf-eai-imap-utf8-00 (work in progress), May 2006.
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[EAI-pop] Newman, C., "POP3 Support for UTF-8", June 2006, <http://
www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-eai-pop-00.txt>.
[EAI-scenarios]
Alvestrand, H., "UTF-8 Mail: Scenarios",
draft-ietf-eai-scenarios-01 (work in progress), June 2006.
[Hoffman-IMAA]
Hoffman, P. and A. Costello, "Internationalizing Mail
Addresses in Applications (IMAA)", draft-hoffman-imaa-03
(work in progress), October 2003.
[IDNAbis-BIDI]
Alvestrand, H. and C. Karp, "An IDNA problem in right-to-
left scripts", October 2006, <http://www.ietf.org/
internet-drafts/draft-alvestrand-idna-bidi-00.txt>.
[JET-IMA] Yao, J. and J. Yeh, "Internationalized eMail Address
(IMA)", draft-lee-jet-ima-00 (work in progress),
June 2005.
[Klensin-emailaddr]
Klensin, J., "Internationalization of Email Addresses",
draft-klensin-emailaddr-i18n-03 (work in progress),
July 2005.
[Net-Unicode]
Klensin, J. and M. Padlipsky, "Unicode Format for Network
Interchange", April 2006, <http://www.ietf.org/
internet-drafts/draft-klensin-net-utf8-00.txt>.
[RFC2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.
[RFC2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
November 1996.
[RFC2047] Moore, K., "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions)
Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text",
RFC 2047, November 1996.
[RFC2231] Freed, N. and K. Moore, "MIME Parameter Value and Encoded
Word Extensions: Character Sets, Languages, and
Continuations", RFC 2231, November 1997.
[RFC2368] Hoffman, P., Masinter, L., and J. Zawinski, "The mailto
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URL scheme", RFC 2368, July 1998.
[RFC2822] Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822,
April 2001.
[RFC3028] Showalter, T., "Sieve: A Mail Filtering Language",
RFC 3028, January 2001.
[RFC3156] Elkins, M., Del Torto, D., Levien, R., and T. Roessler,
"MIME Security with OpenPGP", RFC 3156, August 2001.
[RFC3461] Moore, K., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) Service
Extension for Delivery Status Notifications (DSNs)",
RFC 3461, January 2003.
[RFC3464] Moore, K. and G. Vaudreuil, "An Extensible Message Format
for Delivery Status Notifications", RFC 3464,
January 2003.
[RFC3851] Ramsdell, B., "Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.1 Message Specification",
RFC 3851, July 2004.
[RFC3987] Duerst, M. and M. Suignard, "Internationalized Resource
Identifiers (IRIs)", RFC 3987, January 2005.
[RFC4155] Hall, E., "The application/mbox Media Type", RFC 4155,
September 2005.
[RFC4409] Gellens, R. and J. Klensin, "Message Submission for Mail",
RFC 4409, April 2006.
[RFC4690] Klensin, J., Faltstrom, P., Karp, C., and IAB, "Review and
Recommendations for Internationalized Domain Names
(IDNs)", RFC 4690, September 2006.
Authors' Addresses
John C Klensin
1770 Massachusetts Ave, #322
Cambridge, MA 02140
USA
Phone: +1 617 491 5735
Email: john-ietf@jck.com
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YangWoo Ko
ICU
119 Munjiro
Yuseong-gu, Daejeon 305-732
Republic of Korea
Email: yw@mrko.pe.kr
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Klensin & Ko Expires June 16, 2007 [Page 23]
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