WebID-ISSUE-1: Multiple URI entries in the SAN extension

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Reto Bachmann-Gmür <me@farewellutopia.com>
Date: Tue, Aug 10, 2010 at 3:20 AM
Subject: Re: [foaf-protocols] Multiple URIs in SAN extension
To: Stéphane Corlosquet <scorlosquet@gmail.com>,
foaf-protocols@lists.foaf-project.org


 ----- Original message -----
> Hi,
>
> Reto committed a change [1] suggesting a simple fix for the multiple SAN
> URI entries issue which is to require exactly one URI entry, not sure if
> he meant to postpone that issue to keep the spec simple for now or close
> it entirely (there is still the same issue in 3.1 as well). There was a
> thread [2] on this topic started by Bruno a while back but it only
> discussed the other types of entries (like email) without reaching any
> consensus on the multiple URI entries.
>
>
> - Since there can be multiple entries (and some of us have created
>
> certs with more than one SAN entry), are they all expected to be
>
> dereference-able and contain the same public key? Should we impose a
>
> limit of one entry in the SAN extension?
>
>
> and from [2]
>
> > - Should there be multiple entries of type URI in the S.A.N. extension?
>
>
> > Possibly. We need to think of what this implies in terms of semantics
> > too.
>
>
> > I would suggest to allow multiple URI entries:
>
> "The Identification Certificate MAY contain multiple URI entries in the
>
> Subject Alternative Name extension. The Verification Agent MUST attempt
>
> to verify at least one of these entries. It MAY verify more than one
>
> entry. The Verification Agent MUST NOT consider an entry for which the
>
> verification failed as authenticated, even if other entries have been
>
> verified successfully."
>
>
> > Do we then want to treat multiple successfully verified entries as
>
> owl:sameAs, or should we leave that to the RDF?

I missed this mail ans missread the next one. I can very well live with the
proposal above too. As for identity I don't think the verified claimed
webids should be threated as owl sameAs. But rather as potentially different
identities the holder of the key pair may legitimately represent. I'm
thinking at a collective profile cotaining public keys of its members that
may subsequently act with both there individual as well as with the rights
of that collective.

Cheers,
reto

Received on Thursday, 27 January 2011 14:43:56 UTC