RFC8882

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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) C. Huitema Request for Comments: 8882 Private Octopus Inc. Category: Informational D. Kaiser ISSN: 2070-1721 University of Luxembourg

                                                         September 2020


DNS-Based Service Discovery (DNS-SD) Privacy and Security Requirements

Abstract

  DNS-SD (DNS-based Service Discovery) normally discloses information
  about devices offering and requesting services.  This information
  includes hostnames, network parameters, and possibly a further
  description of the corresponding service instance.  Especially when
  mobile devices engage in DNS-based Service Discovery at a public
  hotspot, serious privacy problems arise.  We analyze the requirements
  of a privacy-respecting discovery service.

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.
  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
  approved by the IESG are candidates for any level of Internet
  Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8882.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.
  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
  2.  Threat Model
  3.  Threat Analysis
    3.1.  Service Discovery Scenarios
      3.1.1.  Private Client and Public Server
      3.1.2.  Private Client and Private Server
      3.1.3.  Wearable Client and Server
    3.2.  DNS-SD Privacy Considerations
      3.2.1.  Information Made Available Via DNS-SD Resource Records
      3.2.2.  Privacy Implication of Publishing Service Instance
              Names
      3.2.3.  Privacy Implication of Publishing Node Names
      3.2.4.  Privacy Implication of Publishing Service Attributes
      3.2.5.  Device Fingerprinting
      3.2.6.  Privacy Implication of Discovering Services
    3.3.  Security Considerations
      3.3.1.  Authenticity, Integrity, and Freshness
      3.3.2.  Confidentiality
      3.3.3.  Resistance to Dictionary Attacks
      3.3.4.  Resistance to Denial-of-Service Attacks
      3.3.5.  Resistance to Sender Impersonation
      3.3.6.  Sender Deniability
    3.4.  Operational Considerations
      3.4.1.  Power Management
      3.4.2.  Protocol Efficiency
      3.4.3.  Secure Initialization and Trust Models
      3.4.4.  External Dependencies
  4.  Requirements for a DNS-SD Privacy Extension
    4.1.  Private Client Requirements
    4.2.  Private Server Requirements
    4.3.  Security and Operation
  5.  IANA Considerations
  6.  References
    6.1.  Normative References
    6.2.  Informative References
  Acknowledgments
  Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

  DNS-Based Service Discovery (DNS-SD) [RFC6763] over Multicast DNS
  (mDNS) [RFC6762] enables zero-configuration service discovery in
  local networks.  It is very convenient for users, but it requires the
  public exposure of the offering and requesting identities along with
  information about the offered and requested services.  Parts of the
  published information can seriously breach the user's privacy.  These
  privacy issues and potential solutions are discussed in [KW14a],
  [KW14b], and [K17].  While the multicast nature of mDNS makes these
  risks obvious, most risks derive from the observability of
  transactions.  These risks also need to be mitigated when using
  server-based variants of DNS-SD.
  There are cases when nodes connected to a network want to provide or
  consume services without exposing their identities to the other
  parties connected to the same network.  Consider, for example, a
  traveler wanting to upload pictures from a phone to a laptop when
  both are connected to the Wi-Fi network of an Internet cafe, or two
  travelers who want to share files between their laptops when waiting
  for their plane in an airport lounge.
  We expect that these exchanges will start with a discovery procedure
  using DNS-SD over mDNS.  One of the devices will publish the
  availability of a service, such as a picture library or a file store
  in our examples.  The user of the other device will discover this
  service and then connect to it.
  When analyzing these scenarios in Section 3.1, we find that the DNS-
  SD messages leak identifying information, such as the Service
  Instance Name, the hostname, or service properties.  We use the
  following definitions:
  Identity
     In this document, the term "identity" refers to the identity of
     the entity (legal person) operating a device.
  Disclosing an Identity
     In this document, "disclosing an identity" means showing the
     identity of operating entities to devices external to the
     discovery process, e.g., devices on the same network link that are
     listening to the network traffic but are not actually involved in
     the discovery process.  This document focuses on identity
     disclosure by data conveyed via messages on the service discovery
     protocol layer.  Still, identity leaks on deeper layers, e.g., the
     IP layer, are mentioned.
  Disclosing Information
     In this document, "disclosing information" is also focused on
     disclosure of data conveyed via messages on the service discovery
     protocol layer, including both identity-revealing information and
     other still potentially sensitive data.

2. Threat Model

  This document considers the following attacker types sorted by
  increasing power.  All these attackers can either be passive (they
  just listen to network traffic they have access to) or active (they
  additionally can craft and send malicious packets).
  external
     An external attacker is not on the same network link as victim
     devices engaging in service discovery; thus, the external attacker
     is in a different multicast domain.
  on-link
     An on-link attacker is on the same network link as victim devices
     engaging in service discovery; thus, the on-link attacker is in
     the same multicast domain.  This attacker can also mount all
     attacks an external attacker can mount.
  MITM
     A Man-in-the-Middle (MITM) attacker either controls (parts of) a
     network link or can trick two parties to send traffic via the
     attacker; thus, the MITM attacker has access to unicast traffic
     between devices engaging in service discovery.  This attacker can
     also mount all attacks an on-link attacker can mount.

3. Threat Analysis

  In this section, we analyze how the attackers described in the
  previous section might threaten the privacy of entities operating
  devices engaging in service discovery.  We focus on attacks
  leveraging data transmitted in service discovery protocol messages.

3.1. Service Discovery Scenarios

  In this section, we review common service discovery scenarios and
  discuss privacy threats and their privacy requirements.  In all three
  of these common scenarios, the attacker is of the type passive on-
  link.

3.1.1. Private Client and Public Server

  Perhaps the simplest private discovery scenario involves a single
  client connecting to a public server through a public network.  A
  common example would be a traveler using a publicly available printer
  in a business center, in a hotel, or at an airport.
                                       ( Taking notes:
                                       ( David is printing
                                       ( a document.
                                        21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                                                    o
           ___                                        o   ___
          /   \                                         _|___|_
          |   |   client                server           |* *|
           \_/      __                                    \_/
            |      / /   Discovery   +----------+          |
           /|\    /_/  <-----------> |  +----+  |         /|\
          / | \__/                   +--|    |--+        / | \
         /  |                           |____/          /  |  \
        /   |                                          /   |   \
           / \                                            / \
          /   \                                          /   \
         /     \                                        /     \
        /       \                                      /       \
       /         \                                    /         \
          David                                        Adversary
  In that scenario, the server is public and wants to be discovered,
  but the client is private.  The adversary will be listening to the
  network traffic, trying to identify the visitors' devices and their
  activity.  Identifying devices leads to identifying people, either
  for surveillance of these individuals in the physical world or as a
  preliminary step for a targeted cyber attack.
  The requirement in that scenario is that the discovery activity
  should not disclose the identity of the client.

3.1.2. Private Client and Private Server

  The second private discovery scenario involves a private client
  connecting to a private server.  A common example would be two people
  engaging in a collaborative application in a public place, such as an
  airport's lounge.
                                          ( Taking notes:
                                          ( David is meeting
                                          ( with Stuart.
                                            21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                                                       o
           ___                               ___         o   ___
          /   \                             /   \          _|___|_
          |   |   server          client    |   |           |* *|
           \_/      __               __      \_/             \_/
            |      / /   Discovery   \ \      |               |
           /|\    /_/  <----------->  \_\    /|\             /|\
          / | \__/                       \__/ | \           / | \
         /  |                                 |  \         /  |  \
        /   |                                 |   \       /   |   \
           / \                               / \             / \
          /   \                             /   \           /   \
         /     \                           /     \         /     \
        /       \                         /       \       /       \
       /         \                       /         \     /         \
         David                              Stuart        Adversary
  In that scenario, the collaborative application on one of the devices
  will act as a server, and the application on the other device will
  act as a client.  The server wants to be discovered by the client but
  has no desire to be discovered by anyone else.  The adversary will be
  listening to network traffic, attempting to discover the identity of
  devices as in the first scenario and also attempting to discover the
  patterns of traffic, as these patterns reveal the business and social
  interactions between the owners of the devices.
  The requirement in that scenario is that the discovery activity
  should not disclose the identity of either the client or the server
  nor reveal the business and social interactions between the owners of
  the devices.

3.1.3. Wearable Client and Server

  The third private discovery scenario involves wearable devices.  A
  typical example would be the watch on someone's wrist connecting to
  the phone in their pocket.
                                       ( Taking notes:
                                       ( David is here. His watch is
                                       ( talking to his phone.
                                         21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)21:57, 22 September 2020 (UTC)~
                                                     o
           ___                                         o  ___
          /   \                                         _|___|_
          |   |   client                                 |* *|
           \_/                                            \_/
            |     _/                                       |
           /|\   //                                       /|\
          / | \__/  ^                                    / | \
         /  |__     | Discovery                         /  |  \
        /   |\ \    v                                  /   |   \
           / \\_\                                         / \
          /   \   server                                 /   \
         /     \                                        /     \
        /       \                                      /       \
       /         \                                    /         \
          David                                        Adversary
  This third scenario is in many ways similar to the second scenario.
  It involves two devices, one acting as server and the other acting as
  client, and it leads to the same requirement of the discovery traffic
  not disclosing the identity of either the client or the server.  The
  main difference is that the devices are managed by a single owner,
  which can lead to different methods for establishing secure relations
  between the devices.  There is also an added emphasis on hiding the
  type of devices that the person wears.
  In addition to tracking the identity of the owner of the devices, the
  adversary is interested in the characteristics of the devices, such
  as type, brand, and model.  Identifying the type of device can lead
  to further attacks, from theft to device-specific hacking.  The
  combination of devices worn by the same person will also provide a
  "fingerprint" of the person, risking identification.
  This scenario also represents the general case of bringing private
  Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices into public places.  A wearable IoT
  device might act as a DNS-SD/mDNS client, which allows attackers to
  infer information about devices' owners.  While the attacker might be
  a person, as in the example figure, this could also be abused for
  large-scale data collection installing stationary IoT-device-tracking
  servers in frequented public places.
  The issues described in Section 3.1.1, such as identifying people or
  using the information for targeted attacks, apply here too.

3.2. DNS-SD Privacy Considerations

  While the discovery process illustrated in the scenarios in
  Section 3.1 most likely would be based on [RFC6762] as a means for
  making service information available, this document considers all
  kinds of means for making DNS-SD resource records available.  These
  means comprise of but are not limited to mDNS [RFC6762], DNS servers
  ([RFC1033], [RFC1034], and [RFC1035]), the use of Service
  Registration Protocol (SRP) [SRP], and multi-link [RFC7558] networks.
  The discovery scenarios in Section 3.1 illustrate three separate
  abstract privacy requirements that vary based on the use case.  These
  are not limited to mDNS.
  1.  Client identity privacy: Client identities are not leaked during
      service discovery or use.
  2.  Multi-entity, mutual client and server identity privacy: Neither
      client nor server identities are leaked during service discovery
      or use.
  3.  Single-entity, mutual client and server identity privacy:
      Identities of clients and servers owned and managed by the same
      legal person are not leaked during service discovery or use.
  In this section, we describe aspects of DNS-SD that make these
  requirements difficult to achieve in practice.  While it is intended
  to be thorough, it is not possible to be exhaustive.
  Client identity privacy, if not addressed properly, can be thwarted
  by a passive attacker (see Section 2).  The type of passive attacker
  necessary depends on the means of making service information
  available.  Information conveyed via multicast messages can be
  obtained by an on-link attacker.  Unicast messages are harder to
  access, but if the transmission is not encrypted they could still be
  accessed by an attacker with access to network routers or bridges.
  Using multi-link service discovery solutions [RFC7558], external
  attackers have to be taken into consideration as well, e.g., when
  relaying multicast messages to other links.
  Server identity privacy can be thwarted by a passive attacker in the
  same way as client identity privacy.  Additionally, active attackers
  querying for information have to be taken into consideration as well.
  This is mainly relevant for unicast-based discovery, where listening
  to discovery traffic requires a MITM attacker; however, an external
  active attacker might be able to learn the server identity by just
  querying for service information, e.g., via DNS.

3.2.1. Information Made Available Via DNS-SD Resource Records

  DNS-Based Service Discovery (DNS-SD) is defined in [RFC6763].  It
  allows nodes to publish the availability of an instance of a service
  by inserting specific records in the DNS ([RFC1033], [RFC1034], and
  [RFC1035]) or by publishing these records locally using multicast DNS
  (mDNS) [RFC6762].  Available services are described using three types
  of records:
  PTR Record
     Associates a service type in the domain with an "instance" name of
     this service type.
  SRV Record
     Provides the node name, port number, priority and weight
     associated with the service instance, in conformance with
     [RFC2782].
  TXT Record
     Provides a set of attribute-value pairs describing specific
     properties of the service instance.

3.2.2. Privacy Implication of Publishing Service Instance Names

  In the first phase of discovery, clients obtain all PTR records
  associated with a service type in a given naming domain.  Each PTR
  record contains a Service Instance Name defined in Section 4 of
  [RFC6763]:
    Service Instance Name = <Instance> . <Service> . <Domain>
  The <Instance> portion of the Service Instance Name is meant to
  convey enough information for users of discovery clients to easily
  select the desired service instance.  Nodes that use DNS-SD over mDNS
  [RFC6762] in a mobile environment will rely on the specificity of the
  instance name to identify the desired service instance.  In our
  example of users wanting to upload pictures to a laptop in an
  Internet cafe, the list of available service instances may look like:
  Alice's Images         . _imageStore._tcp . local
  Alice's Mobile Phone   . _presence._tcp   . local
  Alice's Notebook       . _presence._tcp   . local
  Bob's Notebook         . _presence._tcp   . local
  Carol's Notebook       . _presence._tcp   . local
  Alice will see the list on her phone and understand intuitively that
  she should pick the first item.  The discovery will "just work".
  (Note that our examples of service names conform to the specification
  in Section 4.1 of [RFC6763] but may require some character escaping
  when entered in conventional DNS software.)
  However, DNS-SD/mDNS will reveal to anybody that Alice is currently
  visiting the Internet cafe.  It further discloses the fact that she
  uses two devices, shares an image store, and uses a chat application
  supporting the _presence protocol on both of her devices.  She might
  currently chat with Bob or Carol, as they are also using a _presence
  supporting chat application.  This information is not just available
  to devices actively browsing for and offering services but to anybody
  passively listening to the network traffic, i.e., a passive on-link
  attacker.
  There is, of course, also no authentication requirement to claim a
  particular instance name, so an active attacker can provide resources
  that claim to be Alice's but are not.

3.2.3. Privacy Implication of Publishing Node Names

  The SRV records contain the DNS name of the node publishing the
  service.  Typical implementations construct this DNS name by
  concatenating the "hostname" of the node with the name of the local
  domain.  The privacy implications of this practice are reviewed in
  [RFC8117].  Depending on naming practices, the hostname is either a
  strong identifier of the device or, at a minimum, a partial
  identifier.  It enables tracking of both the device and, by
  extension, the device's owner.

3.2.4. Privacy Implication of Publishing Service Attributes

  The TXT record's attribute-value pairs contain information on the
  characteristics of the corresponding service instance.  This in turn
  reveals information about the devices that publish services.  The
  amount of information varies widely with the particular service and
  its implementation:
  *  Some attributes, such as the paper size available in a printer,
     are the same on many devices and thus only provide limited
     information to a tracker.
  *  Attributes that have free-form values, such as the name of a
     directory, may reveal much more information.
  Combinations of individual attributes have more information power
  than specific attributes and can potentially be used for
  "fingerprinting" a specific device.
  Information contained in TXT records not only breaches privacy by
  making devices trackable but might directly contain private
  information about the user.  For instance, the _presence service
  reveals the "chat status" to everyone in the same network.  Users
  might not be aware of that.
  Further, TXT records often contain version information about
  services, allowing potential attackers to identify devices running
  exploit-prone versions of a certain service.

3.2.5. Device Fingerprinting

  The combination of information published in DNS-SD has the potential
  to provide a "fingerprint" of a specific device.  Such information
  includes:
  *  A list of services published by the device, which can be retrieved
     because the SRV records will point to the same hostname.
  *  Specific attributes describing these services.
  *  Port numbers used by the services.
  *  Priority and weight attributes in the SRV records.
  This combination of services and attributes will often be sufficient
  to identify the version of the software running on a device.  If a
  device publishes many services with rich sets of attributes, the
  combination may be sufficient to identify the specific device and
  track its owner.
  An argument is sometimes made that devices providing services can be
  identified by observing the local traffic and that trying to hide the
  presence of the service is futile.  However, there are good reasons
  for the discovery service layer to avoid unnecessary exposure:
  1.  Providing privacy at the discovery layer is of the essence for
      enabling automatically configured privacy-preserving network
      applications.  Application layer protocols are not forced to
      leverage the offered privacy, but if device tracking is not
      prevented at the deeper layers, including the service discovery
      layer, obfuscating a certain service's protocol at the
      application layer is futile.
  2.  Further, in the case of mDNS-based discovery, even if the
      application layer does not protect privacy, services are
      typically provided via unicast, which requires a MITM attacker,
      whereas identifying services based on multicast discovery
      messages just requires an on-link attacker.
  The same argument can be extended to say that the pattern of services
  offered by a device allows for fingerprinting the device.  This may
  or may not be true, since we can expect that services will be
  designed or updated to avoid leaking fingerprints.  In any case, the
  design of the discovery service should avoid making a bad situation
  worse and should, as much as possible, avoid providing new
  fingerprinting information.

3.2.6. Privacy Implication of Discovering Services

  The consumers of services engage in discovery and in doing so reveal
  some information, such as the list of services they are interested in
  and the domains in which they are looking for the services.  When the
  clients select specific instances of services, they reveal their
  preference for these instances.  This can be benign if the service
  type is very common, but it could be more problematic for sensitive
  services, such as some private messaging services.
  One way to protect clients would be to somehow encrypt the requested
  service types.  Of course, just as we noted in Section 3.2.5, traffic
  analysis can often reveal the service.

3.3. Security Considerations

  For each of the operations described above, we must also consider
  security threats we are concerned about.

3.3.1. Authenticity, Integrity, and Freshness

  Can devices (both servers and clients) trust the information they
  receive?  Has it been modified in flight by an adversary?  Can
  devices trust the source of the information?  Is the source of
  information fresh, i.e., not replayed?  Freshness may or may not be
  required depending on whether the discovery process is meant to be
  online.  In some cases, publishing discovery information to a shared
  directory or registry, rather than to each online recipient through a
  broadcast channel, may suffice.

3.3.2. Confidentiality

  Confidentiality is about restricting information access to only
  authorized individuals.  Ideally, this should only be the appropriate
  trusted parties, though it can be challenging to define who are "the
  appropriate trusted parties."  In some use cases, this may mean that
  only mutually authenticated and trusting clients and servers can read
  messages sent for one another.  The process of service discovery in
  particular is often used to discover new entities that the device did
  not previously know about.  It may be tricky to work out how a device
  can have an established trust relationship with a new entity it has
  never previously communicated with.

3.3.3. Resistance to Dictionary Attacks

  It can be tempting to use (publicly computable) hash functions to
  obscure sensitive identifiers.  This transforms a sensitive unique
  identifier, such as an email address, into a "scrambled" but still
  unique identifier.  Unfortunately, simple solutions may be vulnerable
  to offline dictionary attacks.

3.3.4. Resistance to Denial-of-Service Attacks

  In any protocol where the receiver of messages has to perform
  cryptographic operations on those messages, there is a risk of a
  brute-force flooding attack causing the receiver to expend excessive
  amounts of CPU time and, where applicable, battery power just
  processing and discarding those messages.
  Also, amplification attacks have to be taken into consideration.
  Messages with larger payloads should only be sent as an answer to a
  query sent by a verified client.

3.3.5. Resistance to Sender Impersonation

  Sender impersonation is an attack wherein messages, such as service
  offers, are forged by entities who do not possess the corresponding
  secret key material.  These attacks may be used to learn the identity
  of a communicating party, actively or passively.

3.3.6. Sender Deniability

  Deniability of sender activity, e.g., of broadcasting a discovery
  request, may be desirable or necessary in some use cases.  This
  property ensures that eavesdroppers cannot prove senders issued a
  specific message destined for one or more peers.

3.4. Operational Considerations

3.4.1. Power Management

  Many modern devices, especially battery-powered devices, use power
  management techniques to conserve energy.  One such technique is for
  a device to transfer information about itself to a proxy, which will
  act on behalf of the device for some functions while the device
  itself goes to sleep to reduce power consumption.  When the proxy
  determines that some action is required, which only the device itself
  can perform, the proxy may have some way to wake the device, as
  described for example in [SLEEP-PROXY].
  In many cases, the device may not trust the network proxy
  sufficiently to share all its confidential key material with the
  proxy.  This poses challenges for combining private discovery that
  relies on per-query cryptographic operations with energy-saving
  techniques that rely on having (somewhat untrusted) network proxies
  answer queries on behalf of sleeping devices.

3.4.2. Protocol Efficiency

  Creating a discovery protocol that has the desired security
  properties may result in a design that is not efficient.  To perform
  the necessary operations, the protocol may need to send and receive a
  large number of network packets or require an inordinate amount of
  multicast transmissions.  This may consume an unreasonable amount of
  network capacity, particularly problematic when it is a shared
  wireless spectrum.  Further, it may cause an unnecessary level of
  power consumption, which is particularly problematic on battery
  devices and may result in the discovery process being slow.
  It is a difficult challenge to design a discovery protocol that has
  the property of obscuring the details of what it is doing from
  unauthorized observers while also managing to perform efficiently.

3.4.3. Secure Initialization and Trust Models

  One of the challenges implicit in the preceding discussions is that
  whenever we discuss "trusted entities" versus "untrusted entities",
  there needs to be some way that trust is initially established to
  convert an "untrusted entity" into a "trusted entity".
  The purpose of this document is not to define the specific way in
  which trust can be established.  Protocol designers may rely on a
  number of existing technologies, including PKI, Trust On First Use
  (TOFU), or the use of a short passphrase or PIN with cryptographic
  algorithms, such as Secure Remote Password (SRP) [RFC5054] or a
  Password-Authenticated Key Exchange like J-PAKE [RFC8236] using a
  Schnorr Non-interactive Zero-Knowledge Proof [RFC8235].
  Protocol designers should consider a specific usability pitfall when
  trust is established immediately prior to performing discovery.
  Users will have a tendency to "click OK" in order to achieve their
  task.  This implicit vulnerability is avoided if the trust
  establishment requires more significant participation of the user,
  such as entering a password or PIN.

3.4.4. External Dependencies

  Trust establishment may depend on external parties.  Optionally, this
  might involve synchronous communication.  Systems that have such a
  dependency may be attacked by interfering with communication to
  external dependencies.  Where possible, such dependencies should be
  minimized.  Local trust models are best for secure initialization in
  the presence of active attackers.

4. Requirements for a DNS-SD Privacy Extension

  Given the considerations discussed in the previous sections, we state
  requirements for privacy preserving DNS-SD in the following
  subsections.
  Defining a solution according to these requirements is intended to
  lead to a solution that does not transmit privacy-violating DNS-SD
  messages and further does not open pathways to new attacks against
  the operation of DNS-SD.
  However, while this document gives advice on which privacy protecting
  mechanisms should be used on deeper-layer network protocols and on
  how to actually connect to services in a privacy-preserving way,
  stating corresponding requirements is out of the scope of this
  document.  To mitigate attacks against privacy on lower layers, both
  servers and clients must use privacy options available at lower
  layers and, for example, avoid publishing static IPv4 or IPv6
  addresses or static IEEE 802 Media Access Control (MAC) addresses.
  For services advertised on a single network link, link-local IP
  addresses should be used; see [RFC3927] and [RFC4291] for IPv4 and
  IPv6, respectively.  Static servers advertising services globally via
  DNS can hide their IP addresses from unauthorized clients using the
  split mode topology shown in Encrypted Server Name Indication [ESNI].
  Hiding static MAC addresses can be achieved via MAC address
  randomization (see [RFC7844]).

4.1. Private Client Requirements

  For all three scenarios described in Section 3.1, client privacy
  requires DNS-SD messages to:
  1.  Avoid disclosure of the client's identity, either directly or via
      inference, to nodes other than select servers.
  2.  Avoid exposure of linkable identifiers that allow tracing client
      devices.
  3.  Avoid disclosure of the client's interest in specific service
      instances or service types to nodes other than select servers.
  When listing and resolving services via current DNS-SD deployments,
  clients typically disclose their interest in specific services types
  and specific instances of these types, respectively.
  In addition to the exposure and disclosure risks noted above,
  protocols and implementations will have to consider fingerprinting
  attacks (see Section 3.2.5) that could retrieve similar information.

4.2. Private Server Requirements

  Servers like the "printer" discussed in Section 3.1.1 are public, but
  the servers discussed in Sections 3.1.2 and 3.1.3 are, by essence,
  private.  Server privacy requires DNS-SD messages to:
  1.  Avoid disclosure of the server's identity, either directly or via
      inference, to nodes other than authorized clients.  In
      particular, servers must avoid publishing static identifiers,
      such as hostnames or service names.  When those fields are
      required by the protocol, servers should publish randomized
      values.  (See [RFC8117] for a discussion of hostnames.)
  2.  Avoid exposure of linkable identifiers that allow tracing
      servers.
  3.  Avoid disclosure to unauthorized clients of Service Instance
      Names or service types of offered services.
  4.  Avoid disclosure to unauthorized clients of information about the
      services they offer.
  5.  Avoid disclosure of static IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
  When offering services via current DNS-SD deployments, servers
  typically disclose their hostnames (SRV, A/AAAA), instance names of
  offered services (PTR, SRV), and information about services (TXT).
  Heeding these requirements protects a server's privacy on the DNS-SD
  level.
  The current DNS-SD user interfaces present the list of discovered
  service names to the users and let them pick a service from the list.
  Using random identifiers for service names renders that UI flow
  unusable.  Privacy-respecting discovery protocols will have to solve
  this issue, for example, by presenting authenticated or decrypted
  service names instead of the randomized values.

4.3. Security and Operation

  In order to be secure and feasible, a DNS-SD privacy extension needs
  to consider security and operational requirements including:
  1.  Avoiding significant CPU overhead on nodes or significantly
      higher network load.  Such overhead or load would make nodes
      vulnerable to denial-of-service attacks.  Further, it would
      increase power consumption, which is damaging for IoT devices.
  2.  Avoiding designs in which a small message can trigger a large
      amount of traffic towards an unverified address, as this could be
      exploited in amplification attacks.

5. IANA Considerations

  This document has no IANA actions.

6. References

6.1. Normative References

  [RFC6762]  Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "Multicast DNS", RFC 6762,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC6762, February 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6762>.
  [RFC6763]  Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "DNS-Based Service
             Discovery", RFC 6763, DOI 10.17487/RFC6763, February 2013,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6763>.

6.2. Informative References

  [ESNI]     Rescorla, E., Oku, K., Sullivan, N., and C. A. Wood, "TLS
             Encrypted Client Hello", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft,
             draft-ietf-tls-esni-07, June 1, 2020,
             <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-tls-esni-07>.
  [K17]      Kaiser, D., "Efficient Privacy-Preserving
             Configurationless Service Discovery Supporting Multi-Link
             Networks", August 2017,
             <https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-0-422757>.
  [KW14a]    Kaiser, D. and M. Waldvogel, "Adding Privacy to Multicast
             DNS Service Discovery", DOI 10.1109/TrustCom.2014.107,
             September 2014, <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/
             articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=7011331>.
  [KW14b]    Kaiser, D. and M. Waldvogel, "Efficient Privacy Preserving
             Multicast DNS Service Discovery",
             DOI 10.1109/HPCC.2014.141, August 2014,
             <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/
             articleDetails.jsp?arnumber=7056899>.
  [RFC1033]  Lottor, M., "Domain Administrators Operations Guide",
             RFC 1033, DOI 10.17487/RFC1033, November 1987,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1033>.
  [RFC1034]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
             STD 13, RFC 1034, DOI 10.17487/RFC1034, November 1987,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1034>.
  [RFC1035]  Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
             specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, DOI 10.17487/RFC1035,
             November 1987, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1035>.
  [RFC2782]  Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for
             specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2782, February 2000,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2782>.
  [RFC3927]  Cheshire, S., Aboba, B., and E. Guttman, "Dynamic
             Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses", RFC 3927,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC3927, May 2005,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3927>.
  [RFC4291]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
             Architecture", RFC 4291, DOI 10.17487/RFC4291, February
             2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4291>.
  [RFC5054]  Taylor, D., Wu, T., Mavrogiannopoulos, N., and T. Perrin,
             "Using the Secure Remote Password (SRP) Protocol for TLS
             Authentication", RFC 5054, DOI 10.17487/RFC5054, November
             2007, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5054>.
  [RFC7558]  Lynn, K., Cheshire, S., Blanchet, M., and D. Migault,
             "Requirements for Scalable DNS-Based Service Discovery
             (DNS-SD) / Multicast DNS (mDNS) Extensions", RFC 7558,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7558, July 2015,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7558>.
  [RFC7844]  Huitema, C., Mrugalski, T., and S. Krishnan, "Anonymity
             Profiles for DHCP Clients", RFC 7844,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC7844, May 2016,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7844>.
  [RFC8117]  Huitema, C., Thaler, D., and R. Winter, "Current Hostname
             Practice Considered Harmful", RFC 8117,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC8117, March 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8117>.
  [RFC8235]  Hao, F., Ed., "Schnorr Non-interactive Zero-Knowledge
             Proof", RFC 8235, DOI 10.17487/RFC8235, September 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8235>.
  [RFC8236]  Hao, F., Ed., "J-PAKE: Password-Authenticated Key Exchange
             by Juggling", RFC 8236, DOI 10.17487/RFC8236, September
             2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8236>.
  [SLEEP-PROXY]
             Cheshire, S., "Understanding Sleep Proxy Service",
             December 2009,
             <http://stuartcheshire.org/SleepProxy/index.html>.
  [SRP]      Lemon, T. and S. Cheshire, "Service Registration Protocol
             for DNS-Based Service Discovery", Work in Progress,
             Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-dnssd-srp-04, July 13, 2020,
             <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dnssd-srp-04>.

Acknowledgments

  This document incorporates many contributions from Stuart Cheshire
  and Chris Wood.  Thanks to Florian Adamsky for extensive review and
  suggestions on the organization of the threat model.  Thanks to Barry
  Leiba for an extensive review.  Thanks to Roman Danyliw, Ben Kaduk,
  Adam Roach, and Alissa Cooper for their comments during IESG review.

Authors' Addresses

  Christian Huitema
  Private Octopus Inc.
  Friday Harbor, WA 98250
  United States of America
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   http://privateoctopus.com/


  Daniel Kaiser
  University of Luxembourg
  6, avenue de la Fonte
  L-4364 Esch-sur-Alzette
  Luxembourg
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   https://secan-lab.uni.lu/