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Internet Architecture Board

The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) is "a committee of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and an advisory body of the Internet Society (ISOC). Its responsibilities include architectural oversight of IETF activities, Internet Standards Process oversight and appeal, and the appointment of the Request for Comments (RFC) Editor. The IAB is also responsible for the management of the IETF protocol parameter registries."[1]

History edit

The body which eventually became the IAB was created originally by Vint Cerf in 1979 with the name Internet Configuration Control Board (ICCB) while he was working at the United States Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. In 1983, the ICCB was reorganized by Barry Leiner, Cerf's successor at DARPA, around a series of task forces considering different technical aspects of internetting. The re-organized group was named the Internet Activities Board.[2][3][4]

The IAB set for itself seven principal foci for the period of 1989 to 1990. These were namely:[5]

  • Operational Stability
  • User Services
  • OSI Coexistence
  • Testbed Facilities
  • Security
  • Getting Big
  • Getting Fast

It finally became the Internet Architecture Board, under ISOC, during January 1992, as part of the Internet's transition from a U.S.-government entity to an international, public entity.

Responsibilities edit

The IAB is responsible for:

  • Providing architectural oversight of Internet protocols and procedures
  • Liaising with other organizations on behalf of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
  • Reviewing appeals of the Internet standards process
  • Managing Internet standards documents (the RFC series) and protocol parameter value assignment
  • Confirming the Chair of the IETF and the IETF Area Directors
  • Selecting the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) Chair
  • Acting as a source of advice and guidance to the Internet Society.

In its work, the IAB strives to:

  • Ensure that the Internet is a trusted medium of communication that provides a solid technical foundation for privacy and security, especially in light of pervasive surveillance,
  • Establish the technical direction for an Internet that will enable billions more people to connect, support the vision for an Internet of things, and allow mobile networks to flourish, while keeping the core capabilities that have been a foundation of the Internet's success, and
  • Promote the technical evolution of an open Internet without special controls, especially those which hinder trust in the network.

Activities edit

Activities of the IAB include:

Workshops

  • COVID-19 Network Impacts Workshop, 2020
  • Exploring Synergy between Content Aggregation and the Publisher Ecosystem Workshop 2019
  • Design Expectations vs. Deployment Reality in Protocol Development Workshop 2019
    • Position Papers: DEDR Workshop
  • Explicit Internet Naming Systems (EName) Workshop 2017
  • Internet of Things Software Update Workshop (IoTSU) 2016
    • IoT Semantic Interoperability Workshop 2016
  • Managing Radio Networks in an Encrypted World (MaRNEW) Workshop 2015
  • Coordinating Attack Response at Internet Scale (CARIS) Workshop 2015
    • Call For Papers
    • Agenda: Coordinating Attack Response at Internet Scale (CARIS) Workshop
  • IAB Workshop on Stack Evolution in a Middlebox Internet (SEMI) 2015
  • W3C/IAB workshop on Strengthening the Internet Against Pervasive Monitoring (STRINT) 2014
  • IAB Workshop on Internet Technology Adoption and Transition (ITAT) 2013
  • IAB / IRTF Workshop on Congestion Control for Interactive Real-Time Communication 2012
    • Workshop on Congestion Control: Position Papers
    • Congestion Control Workshop Agenda and Materials
  • Interconnecting Smart Objects with the Internet Workshop 2011
    • Tutorial on Interconnecting Smart Objects with the Internet
    • Position Papers
    • Agenda
  • Internet Privacy Workshop 2010
    • Slides Presentations
    • Minutes of the IAB/W3C/ISOC/MIT Internet Privacy Workshop
    • Meeting Minutes
    • Accepted Position Papers
  • Routing and Addressing Workshop 2006
  • Unwanted Traffic Workshop 2006
  • IAB Wireless Internetworking Workshop 2000

Technical programs and administrative support groups

  • RFC Editor Program: The RFC Series Oversight Committee (RSOC)
  • RFC Editor Future Development Program
  • Plenary Planning Program
  • Internet Threat Model (model-t) Program
  • IETF-IANA Group
    • Evolvability, Deployability, & Maintainability (EDM) Program
  • Concluded Programs
    • Security Program
    • Privacy Program
    • Privacy Reviews
    • IPv6 Privacy Survey
    • Privacy and Security Program
    • Names and Identifiers Program
    • Liaison Oversight Program
    • ITU-T Coordination Program
    • IP Stack Evolution Program
    • IP Evolution
    • Internationalization Program
    • IETF Protocol Registries Oversight Committee (IPROC)
    • IAB Tools and Processes Program
    • Emergency Services

IAB appointments and confirmations

  • Community Coordination Group (CCG): Russ Housley (2017-2021), Barry Leiba (2017-2021), Tim Wicinski (2018-2022)
  • IANA Stewardship Transition Coordination Group (ICG): Russ Housley, Lynn St Amour
  • ICANN Board of Directors Liaison: Harald Alvestrand: (2018–present)
  • ICANN Root Zone Evolution Review Committee (RZERC): Tim (April, 2020–2021)
  • ICANN NomCom: Peter Koch, 2020
  • ICANN Technical Liaison Group (TLG) : Warren Kumari (2019-2021), Petr Špaček (2020-2022)

Responsibilities edit

The IAB's current responsibilities include:[6]

  • Architectural Oversight: The IAB provides oversight of, and occasional commentary on, aspects of the architecture for the network protocols and procedures used by the Internet.
  • Standards Process Oversight and Appeal: The IAB provides oversight of the process used to create Internet Standards. The IAB serves as an appeal board for complaints of improper execution of the standards process, through acting as an appeal body in respect of an Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) standards decision.
  • Request for Comments series: The IAB is responsible for editorial management and publication of the Request for Comments (RFC) document series.
  • Internet Assigned Numbers Authority: In conjunction with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the IAB is responsible for the administration of the assignment of IETF protocol parameter values by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).
  • External Liaison: The IAB acts as representative of the interests of the IETF in liaison relationships with other organizations concerned with standards and other technical and organizational issues relevant to the worldwide Internet.
  • Advice to the Internet Society: The IAB acts as a source of advice and guidance to the board of trustees and Officers of ISOC concerning technical, architectural, procedural, and (where appropriate) policy matters pertaining to the Internet and its enabling technologies.
  • Internet Engineering Steering Group Confirmation: The IAB confirms the IETF Chair and IESG Area Directors, from nominations provided by the IETF Nominating Committee.
  • Internet Research Task Force Chair: The IAB selects a chair of the IRTF for a renewable two-year term.

RFC1087 – Ethics and the Internet and a rise to modernity edit

The IAB takes a formal stance on what constitutes proper use of the Internet in their 1989 memo, RFC 1087: “Ethics and the Internet.” [7] They introduce their contemporary version of the Internet, which at the time was in its nascent stages, serving primarily as a tool for communication of research in the scientific community, and identify the use of this internet as a “privilege.”

The IAB then proclaims as unethical any activity which:

  • seeks to gain unauthorized access to the resources of the Internet,
  • disrupts the intended use of the Internet,
  • wastes resources (people, capacity, computer) through such actions,
  • destroys the integrity of computer-based information
  • compromises the privacy of users.

This memo was written at a time during which the Internet existed in the general research milieu, but since that time the Internet has evolved greatly and expanded in its user-base. The IAB has accordingly taken new stances on ethical and secure Internet use, such as in RFC 8890, where the IAB identifies protecting end users as the first priority in their maintenance of the Internet.[8]

As such, though their core principles are the same, the IAB's priority for protection has shifted from the technical and scientific community to the community of day-to-day users. In another memo RFC7624, the IAB takes a firm stance against pervasive mass surveillance through the use of the Internet on the part of national intelligence agencies, saying that it is necessary that the Internet technical community, including itself, “address the vulnerabilities exploited [by mass surveillance campaigns]...to ensure that the Internet can be trusted by [its] users.” [9]

RFC 2850 - Charter of the Internet Architecture Board edit

RFC 2850 establishes the structure and purpose of the IAB. The RFC specifies the following:[10]

  • IAB membership: the IAB has 13 members, 1 being the chair of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). These members are appointed to 2 year terms.[10]
  • The Role of the IAB: The IAB serves to provide Architectural Oversight for Internet procedures, and to provide oversight in the process of creating Internet standards, including appeals. Furthermore, the IAB acts as a liaison to the Internet Society (ISOC) to advice regarding architectural and technical issues.[10]
  • IAB Organization: The 13 members of the IAB choose 1 member to serve as the chair of the IAB for a 1-year term. There is no limit to the number of terms that the chair can serve. The executive director of the IAB is chosen by the chair. The IAB also has the power to designate the chair of the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) for a 2-year term.[10]
  • Decision-making: in most situations, the IAB aims to come to unanimous decisions on matters. When this is not possible, the IAB must come to a consensus of at least 7 members before taking action.[10]
  • Openness and confidentiality: The IAB makes all meetings open to the public by making it available online, and also publishes RFCs regularly to make its conclusions generally available. In some situations, however, confidential information is excluded for privacy reasons.[10]

RFC 2026 - The Internet Standards Process edit

The Internet Standards process is an activity of the Internet Society that is organized and managed on behalf of the Internet community by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). The Internet Standards Process is concerned with all protocols, procedures, and conventions that are used in or by the Internet. The process of creating an Internet Standard is straightforward: a specification undergoes a period of development and several iterations of review by the Internet community and revision based upon experience, is adopted as a Standard by the appropriate body (either the IAB or the IESG), and is published. Each distinct version of an Internet standards-related specification is published as part of the "Request for Comments" (RFC) document series. This archival series is the official publication channel for Internet standards documents and other publications of the IESG, IAB, and Internet community. The complete Internet Standards Process is itself specified by an RFC, namely RFC 2026.[11]

RFC 8980 - Workshop on Design Expectations vs. Deployment Reality in Protocol Development edit

The RFC 8980 workshop was held in February 2021, where the IAB discussed several topics around security protocols, including:[12]

  • Email standards, which presumed many providers running in a largely uncoordinated fashion but have seen both significant market consolidation and a need for coordination to defend against spam and other attacks. The coordination and centralized defense mechanisms scale better for large entities; these have fueled additional consolidation.
  • The Domain Name System (DNS), which presumed deep hierarchies but has often been deployed in large, flat zones, leading to the nameservers for those zones becoming critical infrastructure. Future developments in DNS may see concentration through the use of globally available common resolver services, which evolve rapidly and can offer better security. Paradoxically, concentration of these queries into a few services creates new security and privacy concerns.
  • The Web, which is built on a fundamentally decentralized design but is now often delivered with the aid of Content Delivery Networks (CDNs). Their services provide scaling, distribution, and prevention of denial of service in ways that new entrants and smaller systems operators would find difficult to replicate. While truly small services and truly large services may each operate using only their own infrastructure, many others are left with the only practical choice being the use of a globally available commercial service.

The workshop resulted in the following recommendations by the IAB:

  • Develop and document a modern threat model.
  • Continue discussion of consolidation/centralization issues.
  • Document architectural principles, e.g., (re)application of the end-to-end principle.

Chairs edit

The following people have served as chair of the IAB:[13]

  • David D. Clark – 1981 to July 1989
  • Vint Cerf – July 1989 to July 1991
  • Lyman Chapin – July 1991 to March 1993
  • Christian Huitema – March 1993 to July 1995
  • Brian Carpenter – July 1995 to March 2000
  • John Klensin – March 2000 to March 2002
  • Leslie Daigle – March 2002 to March 2007
  • Olaf Kolkman – March 2007 to March 2011
  • Bernard Aboba – March 2011 to March 2013
  • Russ Housley- March 2013 to March 2015
  • Andrew Sullivan – March 2015 to March 2017
  • Ted Hardie – March 2017 to March 2020
  • Mirja Kühlewind - March 2020 to present

Current members edit

Members[14] Background
Deborah Brungard Deborah Brungard is a Lead Member of Technical Staff in Wireless and Access Technology at AT&T, where she has worked since 1984. She's been very active in the IETF's routing sector and has made many meaningful contributions there. She received a master's degree in electrical engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology. When off the clock, she can often be found escaping in her Silver Bullet.
Ben Campbell Ben Campbell is an independent consultant and an IAB liaison to the Internet Engineering Steering Group. He's spent time at many different companies and organizations, most notably Oracle Communication, Tekelec, and Estacado Systems. He received his bachelor's degree and His MBA from Texas A&M University and now resides in Irving, Texas. In his free time he sails as much as he can and also enjoys listening to middle eastern percussion.
Jari Arkko Jari Arkko is originally from Kauniainen, Finland but now resides in Jorvas, Finland where he is employed at Ericsson Research, a Swedish mobile equipment manufacturer. He has also served at the IETF as one of the Internet Area Directors in the Internet Engineering Steering Group. He is also an avid family man and enjoys skiing, climbing, and photography.
Jiankang Yao Jiankang Yao is a senior research engineer leading the team in charge of technology standardization at the China Internet Network Information Center. He received his master's degree in computer science from the University of Singapore and went on to receive a Ph.D. in Computer Software and Theory from Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Lars Eggert Lars Eggert is currently based in Helsinki, Finland, where he works as the Technical Director for Networking at NetApp. He has served on the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for over two decades, including a stint as the chair of its research arm, the IRTF. He currently serves as the chair of the IETF. He received a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Southern California and has previously served as the CTO at Nokia.
Wes Hardaker Wes Hardaker is a computer scientist at USC's Information Sciences Institute (USC/ISI). He primarily researches Internet security and is currently leading two NSF-funded projects on DNS and DDoS attacks. He is also active within the IETF and ICANN.
Cullen Jennings Cullen Jennings is a software development manager at Cisco Systems, where he builds collaboration systems used on the Internet. Cullen is also involved with discussions surrounding open source and internet standards.
Mirja Kühlewind Mirja Kühlewind received her PhD in 2015 on Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) from the University of Stuttgart and now researches transport protocol evolution. Mirja also was selected as IETF Transport Area Director in 2016.
Zhenbin Li Zhenbin Li received his bachelor's degree of Information and Communication Engineering from Xi’an Jiaotong University and his Masters of Electronic Engineering from Tsinghua University. Now Zhenbin works as a network engineer and system architect for Huawei.
Jared Mauch Jared was appointed to the IAB as a 2020-2021 candidate. He currently works for Akamai Technologies as a Network Architect. Past work includes founding White Box Optical Inc and Washtenaw Fiber Properties LLC.
Tommy Pauly Tommy was appointed to the IAB as a 2020-2021 candidate. He currently works for Apple on their networking stack for client operating systems, focusing on areas including secure transport protocols and APIs, VPNs, IPv6, and DNS. He currently co-chairs the HTTP and IPPM Working Groups. He received a BS in Computer Science and a BA in music, both from Stanford University.
David Schinazi David Schinazi is an engineer at Google. He currently works primarily as the Chrome Tech Lead for QUIC, and helps out with various standardization efforts at the IETF and W3C. Previously, David worked at Apple on many networking technologies at the heart of iOS, macOS, tvOS and watchOS including networking APIs, TCP, IPv6, IKEv2/IPsec, and routing protocols.
Russ White Russ White began working with computers in the mid-1980s, and computer networks in 1990. He has experience in designing, deploying, breaking, and troubleshooting large scale networks, and is a strong communicator from the white board to the board room. He has co-authored more than forty software patents, participated in the development of several Internet standards, helped develop the CCDE and the CCAr, and worked in Internet governance with the Internet Society. Russ has a background covering a broad spectrum of topics, including radio frequency engineering and graphic design, and is an active student of philosophy and culture.

Related organizations edit

References edit

  1. ^ "About | Internet Architecture Board".
  2. ^ "Status memo". www.ietf.org. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  3. ^ Moschovitis, Christos J. P. (1999). History of the Internet: A Chronology, 1843 to the Present. ABC-CLIO. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-57607-118-2.
  4. ^ "Brief History of the Internet" (PDF). Internet Society. 1997. pp. 13–14.
  5. ^ G. Cerf, Vinton (May 1990). "RFC 1160 - Internet Activities Board". tools.ietf.org/. IETF. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
  6. ^ "IAB Job Description". Retrieved 2018-03-16.
  7. ^ "RFC1087 – Ethics and the Internet". January 1989. Retrieved 2018-03-16.
  8. ^ Nottingham, Mark (August 2020). "RFC8890 – The Internet is for End Users". Retrieved 2021-04-22.
  9. ^ Barnes, Richard; Schneier, Bruce; Jennings, Cullen Fluffy; Hardie, Ted; Trammell, Brian; Huitema, Christian; Borkmann, Daniel (August 2015). "RFC7624 – Confidentiality in the Face of Pervasive Surveillance: A Threat Model and Problem Statement". Retrieved 2021-04-22.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Carpenter, Brian E. (May 2000). "RFC 2850 - Charter of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)". Retrieved 2021-04-22.
  11. ^ Bradner, Scott O. (October 1996). "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  12. ^ https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8980.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ "History page from the IAB website". Retrieved 2017-06-30.
  14. ^ "Members | Internet Architecture Board". Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  15. ^ "IETF Administration LLC Page". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  16. ^ "RFC Editor". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  17. ^ "Internet Assigned Numbers Authority". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  18. ^ "Internet Research Task Force". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  19. ^ "IETF Trust". Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  20. ^ "Internet Society". Retrieved 2021-04-24.

Further reading edit

  • Carpenter, Brian (editor), Charter of the Internet Architecture Board (RFC 2850, May 2000)
  • Kozierok, Charles, The TCP/IP Guide (Sep 2005)
  • Comer, Douglas, Internetworking with TCP/IP vol I: Principles, Protocols, and Architecture (1991)

External links edit

  • Official website
    • List of IAB Members

internet, architecture, board, iccb, redirects, here, term, also, refer, intelligence, community, campus, bethesda, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, structure, style, please, help, improve, this, article,. ICCB redirects here The term may also refer to Intelligence Community Campus Bethesda This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Structure amp Style Please help improve this article if you can April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Internet Architecture Board IAB is a committee of the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF and an advisory body of the Internet Society ISOC Its responsibilities include architectural oversight of IETF activities Internet Standards Process oversight and appeal and the appointment of the Request for Comments RFC Editor The IAB is also responsible for the management of the IETF protocol parameter registries 1 Contents 1 History 2 Responsibilities 3 Activities 4 Responsibilities 5 RFC1087 Ethics and the Internet and a rise to modernity 6 RFC 2850 Charter of the Internet Architecture Board 7 RFC 2026 The Internet Standards Process 8 RFC 8980 Workshop on Design Expectations vs Deployment Reality in Protocol Development 9 Chairs 10 Current members 11 Related organizations 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editThe body which eventually became the IAB was created originally by Vint Cerf in 1979 with the name Internet Configuration Control Board ICCB while he was working at the United States Department of Defense s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency In 1983 the ICCB was reorganized by Barry Leiner Cerf s successor at DARPA around a series of task forces considering different technical aspects of internetting The re organized group was named the Internet Activities Board 2 3 4 The IAB set for itself seven principal foci for the period of 1989 to 1990 These were namely 5 Operational Stability User Services OSI Coexistence Testbed Facilities Security Getting Big Getting FastIt finally became the Internet Architecture Board under ISOC during January 1992 as part of the Internet s transition from a U S government entity to an international public entity Responsibilities editThe IAB is responsible for Providing architectural oversight of Internet protocols and procedures Liaising with other organizations on behalf of the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF Reviewing appeals of the Internet standards process Managing Internet standards documents the RFC series and protocol parameter value assignment Confirming the Chair of the IETF and the IETF Area Directors Selecting the Internet Research Task Force IRTF Chair Acting as a source of advice and guidance to the Internet Society In its work the IAB strives to Ensure that the Internet is a trusted medium of communication that provides a solid technical foundation for privacy and security especially in light of pervasive surveillance Establish the technical direction for an Internet that will enable billions more people to connect support the vision for an Internet of things and allow mobile networks to flourish while keeping the core capabilities that have been a foundation of the Internet s success and Promote the technical evolution of an open Internet without special controls especially those which hinder trust in the network Activities editActivities of the IAB include Workshops COVID 19 Network Impacts Workshop 2020 Exploring Synergy between Content Aggregation and the Publisher Ecosystem Workshop 2019 Design Expectations vs Deployment Reality in Protocol Development Workshop 2019 Position Papers DEDR Workshop Explicit Internet Naming Systems EName Workshop 2017 Internet of Things Software Update Workshop IoTSU 2016 IoT Semantic Interoperability Workshop 2016 Managing Radio Networks in an Encrypted World MaRNEW Workshop 2015 Coordinating Attack Response at Internet Scale CARIS Workshop 2015 Call For Papers Agenda Coordinating Attack Response at Internet Scale CARIS Workshop IAB Workshop on Stack Evolution in a Middlebox Internet SEMI 2015 W3C IAB workshop on Strengthening the Internet Against Pervasive Monitoring STRINT 2014 IAB Workshop on Internet Technology Adoption and Transition ITAT 2013 IAB IRTF Workshop on Congestion Control for Interactive Real Time Communication 2012 Workshop on Congestion Control Position Papers Congestion Control Workshop Agenda and Materials Interconnecting Smart Objects with the Internet Workshop 2011 Tutorial on Interconnecting Smart Objects with the Internet Position Papers Agenda Internet Privacy Workshop 2010 Slides Presentations Minutes of the IAB W3C ISOC MIT Internet Privacy Workshop Meeting Minutes Accepted Position Papers Routing and Addressing Workshop 2006 Unwanted Traffic Workshop 2006 IAB Wireless Internetworking Workshop 2000Technical programs and administrative support groups RFC Editor Program The RFC Series Oversight Committee RSOC RFC Editor Future Development Program Plenary Planning Program Internet Threat Model model t Program IETF IANA Group Evolvability Deployability amp Maintainability EDM Program Concluded Programs Security Program Privacy Program Privacy Reviews IPv6 Privacy Survey Privacy and Security Program Names and Identifiers Program Liaison Oversight Program ITU T Coordination Program IP Stack Evolution Program IP Evolution Internationalization Program IETF Protocol Registries Oversight Committee IPROC IAB Tools and Processes Program Emergency ServicesIAB appointments and confirmations Community Coordination Group CCG Russ Housley 2017 2021 Barry Leiba 2017 2021 Tim Wicinski 2018 2022 IANA Stewardship Transition Coordination Group ICG Russ Housley Lynn St Amour ICANN Board of Directors Liaison Harald Alvestrand 2018 present ICANN Root Zone Evolution Review Committee RZERC Tim April 2020 2021 ICANN NomCom Peter Koch 2020 ICANN Technical Liaison Group TLG Warren Kumari 2019 2021 Petr Spacek 2020 2022 Responsibilities editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The IAB s current responsibilities include 6 Architectural Oversight The IAB provides oversight of and occasional commentary on aspects of the architecture for the network protocols and procedures used by the Internet Standards Process Oversight and Appeal The IAB provides oversight of the process used to create Internet Standards The IAB serves as an appeal board for complaints of improper execution of the standards process through acting as an appeal body in respect of an Internet Engineering Steering Group IESG standards decision Request for Comments series The IAB is responsible for editorial management and publication of the Request for Comments RFC document series Internet Assigned Numbers Authority In conjunction with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN the IAB is responsible for the administration of the assignment of IETF protocol parameter values by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA External Liaison The IAB acts as representative of the interests of the IETF in liaison relationships with other organizations concerned with standards and other technical and organizational issues relevant to the worldwide Internet Advice to the Internet Society The IAB acts as a source of advice and guidance to the board of trustees and Officers of ISOC concerning technical architectural procedural and where appropriate policy matters pertaining to the Internet and its enabling technologies Internet Engineering Steering Group Confirmation The IAB confirms the IETF Chair and IESG Area Directors from nominations provided by the IETF Nominating Committee Internet Research Task Force Chair The IAB selects a chair of the IRTF for a renewable two year term RFC1087 Ethics and the Internet and a rise to modernity editThe IAB takes a formal stance on what constitutes proper use of the Internet in their 1989 memo RFC 1087 Ethics and the Internet 7 They introduce their contemporary version of the Internet which at the time was in its nascent stages serving primarily as a tool for communication of research in the scientific community and identify the use of this internet as a privilege The IAB then proclaims as unethical any activity which seeks to gain unauthorized access to the resources of the Internet disrupts the intended use of the Internet wastes resources people capacity computer through such actions destroys the integrity of computer based information compromises the privacy of users This memo was written at a time during which the Internet existed in the general research milieu but since that time the Internet has evolved greatly and expanded in its user base The IAB has accordingly taken new stances on ethical and secure Internet use such as in RFC 8890 where the IAB identifies protecting end users as the first priority in their maintenance of the Internet 8 As such though their core principles are the same the IAB s priority for protection has shifted from the technical and scientific community to the community of day to day users In another memo RFC7624 the IAB takes a firm stance against pervasive mass surveillance through the use of the Internet on the part of national intelligence agencies saying that it is necessary that the Internet technical community including itself address the vulnerabilities exploited by mass surveillance campaigns to ensure that the Internet can be trusted by its users 9 RFC 2850 Charter of the Internet Architecture Board editRFC 2850 establishes the structure and purpose of the IAB The RFC specifies the following 10 IAB membership the IAB has 13 members 1 being the chair of the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF These members are appointed to 2 year terms 10 The Role of the IAB The IAB serves to provide Architectural Oversight for Internet procedures and to provide oversight in the process of creating Internet standards including appeals Furthermore the IAB acts as a liaison to the Internet Society ISOC to advice regarding architectural and technical issues 10 IAB Organization The 13 members of the IAB choose 1 member to serve as the chair of the IAB for a 1 year term There is no limit to the number of terms that the chair can serve The executive director of the IAB is chosen by the chair The IAB also has the power to designate the chair of the Internet Research Task Force IRTF for a 2 year term 10 Decision making in most situations the IAB aims to come to unanimous decisions on matters When this is not possible the IAB must come to a consensus of at least 7 members before taking action 10 Openness and confidentiality The IAB makes all meetings open to the public by making it available online and also publishes RFCs regularly to make its conclusions generally available In some situations however confidential information is excluded for privacy reasons 10 RFC 2026 The Internet Standards Process editThe Internet Standards process is an activity of the Internet Society that is organized and managed on behalf of the Internet community by the Internet Architecture Board IAB and the Internet Engineering Steering Group IESG The Internet Standards Process is concerned with all protocols procedures and conventions that are used in or by the Internet The process of creating an Internet Standard is straightforward a specification undergoes a period of development and several iterations of review by the Internet community and revision based upon experience is adopted as a Standard by the appropriate body either the IAB or the IESG and is published Each distinct version of an Internet standards related specification is published as part of the Request for Comments RFC document series This archival series is the official publication channel for Internet standards documents and other publications of the IESG IAB and Internet community The complete Internet Standards Process is itself specified by an RFC namely RFC 2026 11 RFC 8980 Workshop on Design Expectations vs Deployment Reality in Protocol Development editThe RFC 8980 workshop was held in February 2021 where the IAB discussed several topics around security protocols including 12 Email standards which presumed many providers running in a largely uncoordinated fashion but have seen both significant market consolidation and a need for coordination to defend against spam and other attacks The coordination and centralized defense mechanisms scale better for large entities these have fueled additional consolidation The Domain Name System DNS which presumed deep hierarchies but has often been deployed in large flat zones leading to the nameservers for those zones becoming critical infrastructure Future developments in DNS may see concentration through the use of globally available common resolver services which evolve rapidly and can offer better security Paradoxically concentration of these queries into a few services creates new security and privacy concerns The Web which is built on a fundamentally decentralized design but is now often delivered with the aid of Content Delivery Networks CDNs Their services provide scaling distribution and prevention of denial of service in ways that new entrants and smaller systems operators would find difficult to replicate While truly small services and truly large services may each operate using only their own infrastructure many others are left with the only practical choice being the use of a globally available commercial service The workshop resulted in the following recommendations by the IAB Develop and document a modern threat model Continue discussion of consolidation centralization issues Document architectural principles e g re application of the end to end principle Chairs editThe following people have served as chair of the IAB 13 David D Clark 1981 to July 1989 Vint Cerf July 1989 to July 1991 Lyman Chapin July 1991 to March 1993 Christian Huitema March 1993 to July 1995 Brian Carpenter July 1995 to March 2000 John Klensin March 2000 to March 2002 Leslie Daigle March 2002 to March 2007 Olaf Kolkman March 2007 to March 2011 Bernard Aboba March 2011 to March 2013 Russ Housley March 2013 to March 2015 Andrew Sullivan March 2015 to March 2017 Ted Hardie March 2017 to March 2020 Mirja Kuhlewind March 2020 to presentCurrent members editMembers 14 BackgroundDeborah Brungard Deborah Brungard is a Lead Member of Technical Staff in Wireless and Access Technology at AT amp T where she has worked since 1984 She s been very active in the IETF s routing sector and has made many meaningful contributions there She received a master s degree in electrical engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology When off the clock she can often be found escaping in her Silver Bullet Ben Campbell Ben Campbell is an independent consultant and an IAB liaison to the Internet Engineering Steering Group He s spent time at many different companies and organizations most notably Oracle Communication Tekelec and Estacado Systems He received his bachelor s degree and His MBA from Texas A amp M University and now resides in Irving Texas In his free time he sails as much as he can and also enjoys listening to middle eastern percussion Jari Arkko Jari Arkko is originally from Kauniainen Finland but now resides in Jorvas Finland where he is employed at Ericsson Research a Swedish mobile equipment manufacturer He has also served at the IETF as one of the Internet Area Directors in the Internet Engineering Steering Group He is also an avid family man and enjoys skiing climbing and photography Jiankang Yao Jiankang Yao is a senior research engineer leading the team in charge of technology standardization at the China Internet Network Information Center He received his master s degree in computer science from the University of Singapore and went on to receive a Ph D in Computer Software and Theory from Chinese Academy of Sciences Lars Eggert Lars Eggert is currently based in Helsinki Finland where he works as the Technical Director for Networking at NetApp He has served on the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF for over two decades including a stint as the chair of its research arm the IRTF He currently serves as the chair of the IETF He received a Ph D in computer science from the University of Southern California and has previously served as the CTO at Nokia Wes Hardaker Wes Hardaker is a computer scientist at USC s Information Sciences Institute USC ISI He primarily researches Internet security and is currently leading two NSF funded projects on DNS and DDoS attacks He is also active within the IETF and ICANN Cullen Jennings Cullen Jennings is a software development manager at Cisco Systems where he builds collaboration systems used on the Internet Cullen is also involved with discussions surrounding open source and internet standards Mirja Kuhlewind Mirja Kuhlewind received her PhD in 2015 on Transmission Control Protocol TCP from the University of Stuttgart and now researches transport protocol evolution Mirja also was selected as IETF Transport Area Director in 2016 Zhenbin Li Zhenbin Li received his bachelor s degree of Information and Communication Engineering from Xi an Jiaotong University and his Masters of Electronic Engineering from Tsinghua University Now Zhenbin works as a network engineer and system architect for Huawei Jared Mauch Jared was appointed to the IAB as a 2020 2021 candidate He currently works for Akamai Technologies as a Network Architect Past work includes founding White Box Optical Inc and Washtenaw Fiber Properties LLC Tommy Pauly Tommy was appointed to the IAB as a 2020 2021 candidate He currently works for Apple on their networking stack for client operating systems focusing on areas including secure transport protocols and APIs VPNs IPv6 and DNS He currently co chairs the HTTP and IPPM Working Groups He received a BS in Computer Science and a BA in music both from Stanford University David Schinazi David Schinazi is an engineer at Google He currently works primarily as the Chrome Tech Lead for QUIC and helps out with various standardization efforts at the IETF and W3C Previously David worked at Apple on many networking technologies at the heart of iOS macOS tvOS and watchOS including networking APIs TCP IPv6 IKEv2 IPsec and routing protocols Russ White Russ White began working with computers in the mid 1980s and computer networks in 1990 He has experience in designing deploying breaking and troubleshooting large scale networks and is a strong communicator from the white board to the board room He has co authored more than forty software patents participated in the development of several Internet standards helped develop the CCDE and the CCAr and worked in Internet governance with the Internet Society Russ has a background covering a broad spectrum of topics including radio frequency engineering and graphic design and is an active student of philosophy and culture Related organizations editIETF Administration LLC This organization provides legal advice for the IAB 15 Request for Comments RFC Editor The RFC series contains documents released by 4 organizations The Internet Architecture Board IAB the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF the Internet Research Task Force IRTF and Independent Submissions 16 Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA 17 Internet Research Task Force IRTF The IRTF works on long term projects related to the Internet 18 The IETF Trust The IETF Trust holds intellectual property licensing and other licensing related to the Internet 19 The Internet Society ISOC 20 References edit About Internet Architecture Board Status memo www ietf org Retrieved 2020 06 26 Moschovitis Christos J P 1999 History of the Internet A Chronology 1843 to the Present ABC CLIO p 104 ISBN 978 1 57607 118 2 Brief History of the Internet PDF Internet Society 1997 pp 13 14 G Cerf Vinton May 1990 RFC 1160 Internet Activities Board tools ietf org IETF Retrieved 23 April 2021 IAB Job Description Retrieved 2018 03 16 RFC1087 Ethics and the Internet January 1989 Retrieved 2018 03 16 Nottingham Mark August 2020 RFC8890 The Internet is for End Users Retrieved 2021 04 22 Barnes Richard Schneier Bruce Jennings Cullen Fluffy Hardie Ted Trammell Brian Huitema Christian Borkmann Daniel August 2015 RFC7624 Confidentiality in the Face of Pervasive Surveillance A Threat Model and Problem Statement Retrieved 2021 04 22 a b c d e f Carpenter Brian E May 2000 RFC 2850 Charter of the Internet Architecture Board IAB Retrieved 2021 04 22 Bradner Scott O October 1996 The Internet Standards Process Revision 3 Retrieved 2021 04 24 https www rfc editor org rfc rfc8980 pdf bare URL PDF History page from the IAB website Retrieved 2017 06 30 Members Internet Architecture Board Retrieved 2021 04 26 IETF Administration LLC Page Retrieved 2021 04 24 RFC Editor Retrieved 2021 04 24 Internet Assigned Numbers Authority Retrieved 2021 04 24 Internet Research Task Force Retrieved 2021 04 24 IETF Trust Retrieved 2021 04 24 Internet Society Retrieved 2021 04 24 Further reading editCarpenter Brian editor Charter of the Internet Architecture Board RFC 2850 May 2000 Kozierok Charles The TCP IP Guide Sep 2005 Comer Douglas Internetworking with TCP IP vol I Principles Protocols and Architecture 1991 External links editOfficial website List of IAB Members Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Internet Architecture Board amp oldid 1200382875, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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