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draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txt

draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txt. IETF 60 4 August 2004 Steven D. Lind. Carrier ENUM. Need to distinguish between private (intra-enterprise, intra-carrier, CUG) uses of ENUM technology versus public ENUM

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draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txt

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  1. draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txt IETF 604 August 2004 Steven D. Lind

  2. Carrier ENUM • Need to distinguish between private (intra-enterprise, intra-carrier, CUG) uses of ENUM technology versus public ENUM • Private uses are legitimate but separate from the question of whether the public ENUM infrastructure can/should support carrier interconnection as well as end user reachability draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

  3. draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txtObjective • Define mechanism to allow public ENUM tree (e164.arpa) to support both end user applications and carrier interconnection • Avoid provisioning and performance issues associated with end user opt-in and control of Tier 2 for carrier registration while preserving user options and protections for end user registration • Leverage existing work toward implementation of end user ENUM and carrier scale for greatest efficiency of both flavors of public ENUM draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

  4. A Delicate Balance • End users want privacy to minimize unwanted communications • Service providers want to maximize call completion • To/from their subscribers • Keep communication on the IP-plane • Single tree (or absolute minimal set of trees) to find call completion information draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

  5. Opt-in • Each country will have its own unique privacy regulations • Three types of “opt-in” (not all good; not for all situations) • User-initiated • User-notified • User-ignored • What type of opt-in might be required for a translation from “+1 973 236 6787” to: • “sip:+19732366787@sip.foo.com” • “sip:+19085617228@sip.bar.com” • “mailto:+19732366787@email.foo.com”? draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

  6. Carrier Trees • Some infrastructure-related information (e.g., caller name) may properly reside in private DNS resources • Basic communication completion information in private trees defeats basic value of ENUM • Fewer trees lead to admission control problems • Who controls admission • What is criteria • Many trees lead to call completion problems • How to maximize chance of success • Do not want to replicate E.164 resource problems draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

  7. draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00.txtProposal • In Tier 1, replace single NS record with 2 non-terminal NAPTRs with different service fields (E2U – end user; E2C – carrier) that point to the respective Tier 2s • Carrier record to be populated by PSTN carrier of record for the number • Querying client decides which record(s) to make use of. draft-pfautz-lind-enum-carrier-00

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