I want to thank the authors for preparing this draft. It addressees an 
important set of scenarios and I am supportive of the goal of this draft to add 
additional protection to JWK Key sets beyond being hosted on a web server 
protected by a TLS connection.
I have some questions around the trust framework/trust model and would like to 
see some clarification or clear guidance on where the X.509 certificates would 
come from and how they would be used. In general I am concerned by practices of 
using the same keys and certs for multiple purposes. It causes confusion and 
may result in security issues.
From reading the draft and some comments referring to Web PKI, I get the 
impression that one option is to use TLS certs for signing artefacts that would 
be long lived, or would need to be archived/managed for a long time. Generally, 
using a key/cert to authenticate a web server for an ephemeral connection is 
different from generating long lived signatures that may be archived for 
decades as part of security audit data. Even if a separate TLS cert is used, it 
raises concerns about confusion that may result from using TLS certs in this 
way (it would be indistinguishable from a regular TLS cert for anyone verifying 
the key set). If the same certs/keys are used for both the TLS connection and 
generating PIKA proofs, it raises questions about application layer access to 
signing keys on the web server where the TLS session gets terminated. TLS keys 
are by nature closer to the edge where they are more accessible/vulnerbale, 
compared to keys that are used to sign artefacts that may persist over time and 
should be kept further away from the edge.
It would be good to provide clear guidance on the trust framework for PIKA 
certs. where they would come from and the need of keeping them separate from 
certificates and keys used for ephemeral purposes (securing TLS connections). 
Perhaps this is something that can be done as part of security considerations, 
or may even be subject to its own in the draft.
Cheers
Pieter


From: Richard Barnes <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 25, 2024 9:56 PM
To: Rifaat Shekh-Yusef <[email protected]>
Cc: oauth <[email protected]>
Subject: [OAUTH-WG] Re: Call for adoption - PIKA

Hi all,

Replying to the top of the thread again to recap the arguments so far.  (Hoping 
the chairs will give us a moment more to discuss before calling cloture.)

It seems like Sharon, Rohan, Watson, and I are all on the same page w.r.t. the 
X.509-based mechanisms in the current draft.  In particular, we're all 
developers of relying party software, and it seems like we're all OK with doing 
X.509 (contra Mike's point about application-level X.509).

If I understand Mike and Giuseppe correctly, they want to be less prescriptive 
about how the PIKA signer establishes their authority for an "iss" value, so 
that an OP could use some other mechanism (e.g., OpenID Federation).  It sounds 
like Mike at least is OK with the draft aside from this point.

I would be open to adding some optionality in the authority mechanism here, but 
I'm wary of losing the concrete interop that we get with the draft as it is.  
So we would need at least a strong recommendation for X.509, even if something 
else can be used if the parties agree to it.  I would be more comfortable doing 
something along the lines of what Rohan suggests, namely defining a concrete, 
X.509-based thing here, and extending it to support other mechanisms via 
follow-on specs as needed.  If there were a single additional mechanism that 
people wanted, as opposed to a generic "[insert authority mechanism here]", 
that would also be more palatable to me.

Additional feedback would be useful on a couple of points:

1. From RPs: Is the X.509 requirement onerous to you?  Or is there enough 
library support out there that it's not a big deal?
2. From OPs: Is signing using a key bound to an X.509 certificate workable for 
you?  Or do you need some other authority framework?
3. From everyone: Is the general mechanism here useful, assuming we can align 
on some set of authority frameworks?

Thanks,
--Richard


On Mon, Jun 10, 2024 at 7:47 AM Rifaat Shekh-Yusef 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
All,
This is an official call for adoption for the Proof of Issuer Key Authority 
(PIKA) draft:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-barnes-oauth-pika/

Please, reply on the mailing list and let us know if you are in favor or 
against adopting this draft as WG document, by June 24th.

Regards,
 Rifaat & Hannes

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