A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.
This draft is a work item of the Registration Protocols Extensions WG of the
IETF.
Title : Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) Partial
Response
Authors : Mario Loffredo
Hi all,
following the feedbacks by James and Andy at last meeting (thanks a lot
for your suggestions!), in this version, the defined field sets are no
more required. They are only proposed as basic field sets servers can
implement to improve their interoperability with clients. The
definiti
A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.
This draft is a work item of the Registration Protocols Extensions WG of the
IETF.
Title : Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) Reverse
search capabilities
Authors : Mario Loff
Hi all,
I have reviewed the "Privacy Considerations" section to outline even
more that reverse search must be provided only to authenticated and
authorized users legitimated by a legal basis.
I hope from now on the WG can focus on the technical aspects.
I look forward to further reviews.
Ch
A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.
This draft is a work item of the Registration Protocols Extensions WG of the
IETF.
Title : Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) Query
Parameters for Result Sorting and Paging
Authors
Hi all,
this version harmonizes the "paging_metadata" element for the two
pagination methods.
In my opinion, both methods have strengths and weaknesses. Therefore,
since the "paging_metadata" element keeps the same structure and
basically clients make use of the paging links as they are prov
Personally, I felt the conversation at the microphone about client/server
capability was a huge misunderstanding. You did not seem to "get" part of
what was being said, about the need for a client to be able to know what a
server can do (in the future) beyond what a server has done (now, or in the
Do you consider the case where I ask for reverse/inverse indexed
references between objects which do *NOT* expose PII as ones which
demand authentication and access control?
the model of inverse-indexes is not limited to ones which return PII.
The problem is that where it does involve PII it has p