<abstract>This document proposes the formation of a Special Interest Group devoted to the analysis of security threats related to Jabber technologies.</abstract>
<remark>Changed status to Retracted since it now appears unnecessary to form a SIG in order to complete this work; rather, it should be sufficient to write a XEP and solicit feedback from appropriate security experts before the Last Call. However, such a XEP should use the process described herein.</remark>
<p>Because security is a core value within the Jabber community, it is appropriate for the XMPP Standards Foundation to assess potential security threats related to technologies that implement the Jabber protocols (including XMPP and defined XMPP extensions), as well as ways to address the threats (for general information about the Internet threat model, see &rfc3552;). Furthermore, since security threats are wide-ranging and of broad concern, it would be valuable for interested members of the entire Jabber community to discuss these matters. Unfortunately, security discussions can often be theoretical, contentious, and inconclusive. Thus it is imperative that discussion proceed based on a methodical process of threat identification, risk analysis, and prioritization before moving on to documentation of threat responses (preferably in protocol specifications such as &xep0001;). This document proposes a forum and process for such security discussions in the form of a Special Interest Group (see &xep0002;) that shall report to the &COUNCIL; in accordance with Article VIII of the &BYLAWS;.</p>
<p>The role of the Security SIG shall be to identify and describe security threats related to Jabber technologies, analyze their potential risk, assign priorities to each threat, provide references to existing responses, and (where appropriate) provisionally recommend improvements in Jabber protocols and technologies in order to address the identified threats. The Security SIG shall not itself develop or approve protocols, which tasks shall remain under the purview of the &SSIG; and the Jabber Council respectively.</p>
<p>The Security SIG shall be open to the public and shall not be limited to elected members of the XMPP Standards Foundation. Security SIG discussions shall be conducted in open forums, including a dedicated mailing list at <security-jig@jabber.org>. The process for moderating such discussions shall be decided by the members of the Security SIG, but such moderation is strongly encouraged in order to follow the orderly process of threat identification and risk analysis outlined below.</p>
<p>A brief document specifying the process by which the SIG shall identify, define, analyze, and prioritize a collection of documented security-related threats. This process document will not identify threats or define ways to address them, but instead specify the process to be followed in Steps 2 and 3 below. In defining the process, the SIG should also describe some of its guiding principles, such as:</p>
<li>An abstract that briefly describes the threat</li>
<li>A clear and thorough definition of the threat, preferably to include an attack tree <note>For information about attack trees, refer to <<linkurl="http://www.schneier.com/paper-attacktrees-ddj-ft.html">http://www.schneier.com/paper-attacktrees-ddj-ft.html</link>>.</note></li>
<li>The estimated likelihood of the threat (e.g., high/medium/low)</li>
<li>The estimated potential damage the threat could cause (e.g., high/medium/low)</li>
<li>A resulting priority for addressing the threat</li>
<li>The gap between the identified threat and existing responses</li>
<li>Potential approaches to addressing the threat or closing the gap, including implementation issues associated with each approach (since security measures that cannot or will not be implemented are useless)</li>
<p>The template will not fully define the foregoing information, but instead specify what information must be defined for each threat when completing the analysis described in Step 3.</p>
<p>An evolving document that completes the template defined in Step 2 for all identified threats by following the process established in Step 1. The result will be a thorough analysis of all potential security threats related to Jabber protocols and technologies. Note: This document shall not define complete solutions to the identified threats, although it may outline potential and recommended approaches. Solutions shall be defined in standalone documents such as XEPs.</p>