The I in RPKI does not stand for Identity
Arrcus & Internet Initiative Japan
5147 Crystal Springs
Bainbridge Island
WA
98110
US
randy@psg.com
Vigil Security, LLC
516 Dranesville Road
Herndon, VA
20170
US
housley@vigilsec.com
There is a false notion that Internet Number Resources (INRs) in
the RPKI can be associated with the real-world identity of the
'holder' of an INR. This document specifies that RPKI does not
associate to the INR holder.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 when, and only when, they appear in all capitals,
as shown here.
The Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI), see , "Represents the allocation hierarchy of IP
address space and Autonomous System (AS) numbers," which are
collectively known as Internet Number Resources (INRs). Since
initial deployment, the RPKI has grown to include other similar
resource and routing data, e.g. Router Keying for BGPsec, .
In security terms, the phrase "Public Key" implies there is also
a corresponding private key . The RPKI
provides strong authority to the current holder of INRs; however,
some people a have a desire to use RPKI private keys to sign
arbitrary documents as the INR 'holder' of those resources with the
inappropriate expectation that the signature will be considered an
attestation to the authenticity of the document content. But in
reality, the RPKI certificate is only an authorization to speak for
the explicitly identified INRs; it is explicitly not intended for
authentication of the 'holders' of the INRs. This situation is
emphasized in Section 2.1 of .
It has been suggested that one could authenticate real-world
business transactions with the signatures of INR holders. E.g.
Bill's Bait and Sushi (BB&S) could use the private key attesting
to that they are the holder of their AS in the RPKI to sign a Letter
of Authorization (LOA) for some other party to rack and stack
hardware owned by BB&S. Unfortunately, while this may be
technically possible, it is neither appropriate nor meaningful.
The I in RPKI actually stands for "Infrastructure," as in
Resource Public Key Infrastructure, not for "Identity". In fact,
the RPKI does not provide any association between INRs and the real
world holder(s) of those INRs. The RPKI provides authorization to
make assertions only regarding Internet Number Resources, such as IP
prefixes or AS numbers, and data such as ASPA records.
In short, avoid the desire to use RPKI certificates for any
purpose other than the verification of authorizations associated
with the delegation of INRs or attestations related to INRs.
Instead, recognize that these authorizations and attestations take
place irrespective of the identity of a RPKI private key holder.
The RPKI was designed and specified to sign certificates for use
within the RPKI itself and to generate Route Origin Authorizations
(ROAs), , for use in routing. Its design
intentionally precluded use for attesting to real-world identity as,
among other issues, it would expose the Certification Authority (CA)
to liability.
That the RPKI does not authenticate real-world identity is by
design. If it tried to do so, aside from the liability, it would
end in a world of complexity with no proof of termination.
Registries such as the Regional Internet Registries (RIRs)
provide INR to real-world identity mapping through WHOIS, , and similar services. They claim to be
authoritative, at least for the INRs which they allocate.
That is, RPKI-based credentials of INRs MUST NOT be used to
authenticate real-world documents or transactions. That might be
done with some formal external authentication of authority for an
otherwise anonymous INR holder to authenticate the particular
document or transaction. Given such external, i.e. non-RPKI,
verification of authority, the use of RPKI-based credentials seems
superfluous.
The RPKI base document, , Section 2.1
says explicitly "An important property of this PKI is that
certificates do not attest to the identity of the subject."
The Template for a Certification Practice Statement (CPS) for the
Resource PKI (RPKI) Section 3.1, Naming,
makes very clear that "The Subject name in each certificate SHOULD
NOT be meaningful;" and goes on to do so at some length.
Normally, the INR holder does not hold the private key attesting
to their resources; the Certification Authority (CA) does. The INR
holder has a real-world business relationship with the CA for which
they have likely signed real-world documents.
As the INR holder does not have the keying material, they rely on
the CA, to which they presumably present credentials, to manipulate
their INRs. These credentials may be userid/password (with two
factor authentication one hopes), a hardware token, client browser
certificates, etc.
Hence schemes such as
and must go to great
lengths to extract the supposedly relevant keys from the CA.
For some particular INR, say Bill's Bait and Sushi's Autonomous
System (AS) number, someone out on the net probably has the
credentials to the CA account in which BB&S's INRs are
registered. That could be the owner of BB&S, Roberto's Taco
Stand, an IT vendor, or the Government of Elbonia. One simply can
not know.
In large organizations, INR management is often compartmentalized
with no authority over anything beyond dealing with INR
registration. The INR manager for Bill's Bait and Sushi is unlikely
to be authorized to conduct bank transactions for BB&S, or even
to authorize access to BB&S's servers in some colocation
facility.
Then there is the temporal issue. The holder of that AS may be
BB&S today when some document was signed, and could be the
Government of Elbonia tomorrow. Or the resource could have been
administratively moved from one CA to another, likely requiring a
change of keys. If so, how does one determine if the signature on
the real-world document is still valid?
While Ghostbuster Records may seem to
identify real-world entities, their semantic content is completely
arbitrary, and does not attest to holding of any INRs. They are
merely clues for operational support contact in case of technical
RPKI problems.
Usually, before registering INRs, CAs require proof of an INR
holding via external documentation and authorities. It is somewhat
droll that the CPS Template, , does not
mention any diligence the CA must, or even might, conduct to assure
the INRs are in fact owned by a registrant.
That someone can provide 'proof of possession' of the private key
signing over a particular INR should not be taken to imply that they
are a valid legal representative of the organization in possession
of that INR. They could be just an INR administrative person.
Autonomous System Numbers do not identify real-world entities.
They are identifiers some network operators 'own' and are only used
for loop detection in routing. They have no inherent semantics other
than uniqueness.
Attempts to use RPKI data to authenticate real-world documents or
other artifacts requiring identity are invalid and misleading.
When a document is signed with the private key associated with an
RPKI certificate, the signer is speaking for the INRs, the IP
address space and Autonomous System (AS) numbers, in the
certificate. This is not an identity; this is an authorization. In
schemes such as and the signed message further
narrows this scope of INRs. The INRs in the message are a subset of
the INRs in the certificate. If the signature is valid, the message
content comes from a party that is authorized to speak for that
subset of INRs.
Control of INRs for an entity could be used to falsely authorize
transactions or documents for which the INR manager has no
authority.
This document has no IANA Considerations.
The authors thank George Michaelson and Job Snijders for lively
discussion, Geoff Huston for some more formal text, Ties de Kock for
useful suggestions, and last but not least, Biff for the loan of
Bill's Bait and Sushi.