[cabfpub] Draft CAA motion (2)

Ryan Sleevi sleevi at google.com
Thu Nov 10 12:15:40 MST 2016


On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 10:56 AM, Steve Medin <Steve_Medin at symantec.com>
wrote:

> I’m suggesting that contracts like what we’re discussing gain material
> impact on the BRs through BR mention of them and their associated handling
> and disclosure of existence rules.
>

Can you point to what rules you're thinking of that require the disclosure
or handling? Because I can certainly think of examples with Symantec not
disclosing contracts.


> I want to allow customers to grant CAs the right to bypass CAA checking,
>

Why? Can we move from talking about things wanted to understanding why?
This was discussed at the F2F, but it's particularly helpful to understand
why you object, other than it creates more work. I'm not saying that more
work is not important, but I want to make sure that if there are reasons
other than that it's more work, we've properly considered them.


> and I want to publicly show that the right has been granted (response to
> Jeremy) so that such behavior can be inspected.
>

The problem with what's proposed is there's a significant and material
difference between expressing that in a TCSC - which is technically
enforcable - and a general contract proviso.


> If stricter rules about CAA are imposed and they have contractual impact
> because, given the above, contracts become a constraint and a compliance
> tool in the BRs, then it would follow that inadequate or out of date
> contracts would put a CA at risk of non-compliance.
>

I believe we must be talking past eachother, because I don't believe there
is anything in the BRs to support your claim here. I'd love to be mistaken
- to see actual support for this statement - but I suspect it's moreso
borne out of a misunderstanding of the point I was making.

I'm specifically talking about better controls afforded via CAA - such as
the ability to restrict issuance methods that was discussed in the F2F. If
the CA/B Forum (or the IETF) introduced such controls, then it bears
determining with the customer whether or not they want to continue to
opt-out of CAA. Similarly, if CAA affords them more flexibility through
some change in the Forum or the IETF, it bears determining with the
customer whether or not they want to continue to opt-out of CAA.

I'm specifically objecting to the notion of 'set it and forget it' - that
is, a blanket exclusion that never gets revisited. If the idea of
contractual-based exclusions is countenanced, then we should take
appropriate steps to ensure its scope is limited. One such way to limit
that scope is require the exclusion be reauthorized any time there's a
chance in the Forum/IETFs CAA policies.
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