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Re: WebRTC and emergency communications (Was: Re: IETF Meeting in South America)

2013-05-27 12:56:20
Agreed - this is not so much about standards, but developer awareness. If we 
write any "how to" or similar informational documents, they should probably 
contain that type of discussion.

There is a browser aspect, however: Right now, users only have a binary choice 
about location disclosure, even though I suspect many users would be fine with 
"location disclosure for 911 only", not "disclose my fine-grained location for 
any purpose you like".

On May 27, 2013, at 1:51 PM, Richard Barnes <rlb(_at_)ipv(_dot_)sx> wrote:

Even for location delivery, there's not that much to say at the standards 
layer.

For *delivery*, the story is the same as with signaling.  Either the RTCWeb 
VoIP service can translate the location information to comply with RFC 6442, 
or the PSAP can just build a web app that collects it however it likes.

For *determination*, it's about the browser.  You can do browser-based 
geolocation today, to "OK" quality.  Or the browser could implement the 
GEOPRIV protocols to benefit from network-provided location.

All that's about implementation/deployment though.  I don't really see any 
new standards there.

--Richard



On Mon, May 27, 2013 at 12:19 PM, Henning Schulzrinne 
<hgs(_at_)cs(_dot_)columbia(_dot_)edu> wrote:
The most difficult part for any emergency calling system is location 
delivery. WebRTC probably doesn't have much impact on emergency calls if all 
the calls traverse a server of some kind and if the caller location can be 
looked up based on caller IP addresses, but once you have the end system 
involved in location determination (e.g., for mobile devices or for 
DHCP-delivered location), it has to know when a call is an emergency call as 
you otherwise end up providing location for every call, which is non-ideal 
from a privacy and battery perspective.

At least in the US, many of the WebRTC services would be considered 
"interconnected VoIP", so they are indeed subject to 911 obligations.

Henning

On May 26, 2013, at 3:57 PM, Richard Barnes <rlb(_at_)ipv(_dot_)sx> wrote:

Indeed, there has already been some coordination between the groups, going 
back about a year:
<http://tools.ietf.org/agenda/84/slides/slides-84-ecrit-0.pdf>
<http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-aboba-rtcweb-ecrit-00.txt>

So my read of the situation is much less dire than James's.  As I understand 
it, the upshot of the initial coordination discussions is that there's not a 
single, clear "RTCWEB+ECRIT" story.  Instead, there are a few ways you can 
put them together.  In the short run, without upgrading PSAPs, RTCWEB VoIP 
services can bridge RTCWEB signaling to ECRIT-compliant SIP, either at the 
server, or at the client using something like SIP-over-WebSockets.  In the 
long run, PSAPs can just advertise an RTCWEB service like they would 
advertise a SIP service today (in LoST).  Neither of these is incompatible 
with RTCWEB or ECRIT as they're being specified today.

I expect there are probably some ECRIT considerations that aren't naturally 
supported in RTCWEB.  Things like real-time text come to mind.  However, it 
doesn't seem to me that there's gross incompatibility.

--Richard




On Sat, May 25, 2013 at 10:18 AM, John C Klensin 
<john-ietf(_at_)jck(_dot_)com> wrote:


--On Saturday, May 25, 2013 10:10 +0300 Jari Arkko
<jari(_dot_)arkko(_at_)piuha(_dot_)net> wrote:

...
I didn't know about the details of the emergency
communications situation. But it is always difficult to
balance getting something out early vs. complete. I know how
much pressure there is on the working groups to keep up with
things actually happening in the browsers and organisations
setting up to use this technology. Do you think the retrofit
will be problematic, and do you have a specific suggestion
about what should be included today?

Jari,

James will probably have a different answer and perspective, but
I suggest that retrofits of security-sensitive features are so
often problematic to make "always" not much of an exaggeration.

I don't think there is any general solution to the "early vs.
complete" tradeoff [1], nor, as long as we keep trying to deal
with things as collections of disconnected pieces rather than
systems, to the issues created by WGs with significant overlaps
in either scope or technology.  What I think we can do is to be
particularly vigilant to be sure that the two WGs are tracking
and frequently reviewing each other's work.   At least RTCWEB
and ECRIT are in the same area, which should make that
coordination easier than it might be otherwise.

   john


[1] Watch for a note about this that I've been trying to
organize for about two weeks and hope to finish and post this
weekend.







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