Hi Nadim,

> If Cisco or Red Hat or whoever has big customers, or if some government
passes a regulation, that asks for TLS 1.3 to incorporate Triple-DES as its
symmetric cipher, then should the IETF be passing drafts that accommodate
this?

Luckily, what you're describing here is a completely different thing.





On Tue, Feb 24, 2026 at 7:18 AM Eric Rescorla <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On Mon, Feb 23, 2026 at 10:04 PM Nico Williams <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Feb 24, 2026 at 06:48:54AM +0100, Nadim Kobeissi wrote:
>> > If the code points already exist then why can’t we just follow Richard
>> Barnes’ proposal:
>>
>> Because there was a concensus call on adoption, and the WG chairs called
>> the consensus as being in favor of adoption.  There have been appeals,
>> and the appeals did not succeed (I'm not inviting a sub-thread about
>> that, just stating the current state of play).
>>
>> I argued against adoption.  But given that it was adopted, publication
>> can't be held up by a desire for a different outcome to the adoption
>> call.
>>
>
> As a matter of process, this is simply untrue. WGs need consensus for the
> document at the time of publication, notwithstanding the outcome of the
> adoption call. The chairs have some power to structure the argument
> to rule out repeated discussion of questions that have been asked and
> answered, but at the end of the day, documents need consensus to proceed.
>
> -Ekr
>
> _______________________________________________
> TLS mailing list -- [email protected]
> To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
>
_______________________________________________
TLS mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to