Here are my notes. 

Participants:

* John Bradley
* Derek Atkins
* Phil Hunt
* Prateek Mishra
* Hannes Tschofenig
* Mike Jones
* Antonio Sanso
* Justin Richer

Notes: 

My slides are available here: 
http://www.tschofenig.priv.at/OAuth2-Security-11Feb2013.ppt

Slide #2 summarizes earlier discussions during the conference calls. 

-- HTTP vs. JSON

Phil noted that he does not like to use the MAC Token draft as a starting point 
because it does not re-use any of the work done in the JOSE working group and 
in particular all the libraries that are available today. He mentioned that 
earlier attempts to write the MAC Token code lead to problems for implementers. 

Justin responded that he does not agree with using JSON as a transport 
mechanism since this would replicate a SOAP style. 

Phil noted that he wants to send JSON but the signature shall be computed over 
the HTTP header field. 

-- Flexibility for the keyed message digest computation

>From earlier discussion it was clear that the conference call participants 
>wanted more flexibility regarding the keyed message digest computation. For 
>this purpose Hannes presented the DKIM based approach, which allows selective 
>header fields to be included in the digest. This is shown in slide #4. 

After some discussion the conference call participants thought that this would 
meet their needs. Further investigations would still be useful to determine the 
degree of failed HMAC calculations due to HTTP proxies modifying the content. 

-- Key Distribution

Hannes presented the open issue regarding the choice of key distribution. 
Slides #6-#8 present three techniques and Hannes asked for feedback regarding 
the preferred style. Justin and others didn't see the need to decide on one 
mechanism - they wanted to keep the choice open. Derek indicated that this will 
not be an acceptable approach. Since the resource server and the authorization 
server may, in the OAuth 2.0 framework, be entities produced by different 
vendors there is an interoperability need. Justin responded that he disagrees 
and that the resource server needs to understand the access token and referred 
to the recent draft submission for the token introspection endpoint. Derek 
indicated that the resource server has to understand the content of the access 
token and the token introspection endpoint just pushes the problem around: the 
resource server has to send the access token to the authorization server and 
then the resource server gets the result back (which he then a
 gain needs to understand) in order to make a meaningful authorization 
decision. 

Everyone agreed that the client must receive the session key from the 
authorization server and that this approach has to be standardized. It was also 
agreed that this is a common approach among all three key distribution 
mechanisms.

Hannes asked the participants to think about their preference. 

The questions regarding key naming and the indication for the intended resource 
server the client wants to talk to have been postponed. 
 
Ciao
Hannes


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