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Internet Architecture Board (IAB) M. Knodel Request for Comments: 9490 Category: Informational W. Hardaker ISSN: 2070-1721

                                                              T. Pauly
                                                          January 2024
 Report from the IAB Workshop on Management Techniques in Encrypted
                          Networks (M-TEN)

Abstract

 The "Management Techniques in Encrypted Networks (M-TEN)" workshop
 was convened by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) from 17 October
 2022 to 19 October 2022 as a three-day online meeting.  The workshop
 was organized in three parts to discuss ways to improve network
 management techniques in support of even broader adoption of
 encryption on the Internet.  This report summarizes the workshop's
 discussion and identifies topics that warrant future work and
 consideration.
 Note that this document is a report on the proceedings of the
 workshop.  The views and positions documented in this report are
 those of the expressed during the workshop by participants and do not
 necessarily reflect IAB views and positions.

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 Architecture Board (IAB)
 and represents information that the IAB has deemed valuable to
 provide for permanent record.  It represents the consensus of the
 Internet Architecture Board (IAB).  Documents approved for
 publication by the IAB are not 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/rfc9490.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2024 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.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
   1.1.  About This Workshop Report Content
 2.  Workshop Scope and Discussion
   2.1.  "Where We Are" - Requirements and Passive Observations
     2.1.1.  Traffic Classification and Network Management
     2.1.2.  Preventing Traffic Analysis
     2.1.3.  Users and Privacy
     2.1.4.  Discussion
   2.2.  "Where We Want to Go" - Collaboration Principles
     2.2.1.  First-Party Collaboration for Network Management
     2.2.2.  Second- and Third-Party Collaboration for Network
             Management
     2.2.3.  Visible, Optional Network Management
     2.2.4.  Discussion
   2.3.  "How We Get There" - Collaboration Use Cases
     2.3.1.  Establishing Expected Contracts to Enable Security
             Management
     2.3.2.  Zero-Knowledge Middleboxes
     2.3.3.  Red Rover - a Collaborative Approach to Content
             Filtering
 3.  Conclusions
 4.  Informative References
 Appendix A.  Position Papers
   A.1.  Motivations and Principles
   A.2.  Classification and Identification of Encrypted Traffic
   A.3.  Ideas for Collaboration and Coordination between Devices
         and Networks
   A.4.  Other Background Material
 Appendix B.  Workshop Participants
 Appendix C.  Program Committee
 IAB Members at the Time of Approval
 Acknowledgments
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) holds occasional workshops
 designed to consider long-term issues and strategies for the
 Internet, and to suggest future directions for the Internet
 architecture.  This long-term planning function of the IAB is
 complementary to the ongoing engineering efforts performed by working
 groups of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
 User privacy and security are constantly being improved by
 increasingly strong and more widely deployed encryption.  This
 workshop aims to discuss ways to improve network management
 techniques in support of even broader adoption of encryption on the
 Internet.
 Network management techniques need to evolve to work effectively and
 reliably in the presence of ubiquitous traffic encryption and to
 support user privacy.  In an all-encrypted network, it is not viable
 to rely on unencrypted metadata for network monitoring and security
 functions, troubleshooting devices, and passive traffic measurements.
 New approaches are needed to track network behaviors, e.g., by
 directly cooperating with endpoints and applications, increasing use
 of in-band telemetry, increasing use of active measurement
 approaches, and privacy-preserving inference techniques.
 The aim of this IAB online workshop from October 17-19, 2022, has
 been to provide a platform to explore the interaction between network
 management and traffic encryption and to initiate work on
 collaborative approaches that promote security and user privacy while
 supporting operational requirements.  As such, the workshop addressed
 the following questions:
  • What are actionable network management requirements?
  • Who is willing to work on collaborative solutions?
  • What are the starting points for collaborative solutions?

1.1. About This Workshop Report Content

 This document is a report on the proceedings of the workshop.  The
 views and positions documented in this report are those of the
 workshop participants and do not necessarily reflect IAB views and
 positions.
 Furthermore, the content of the report comes from presentations given
 by workshop participants and notes taken during the discussions,
 without interpretation or validation.  Thus, the content of this
 report follows the flow and dialog of the workshop but does not
 attempt to capture a consensus.

2. Workshop Scope and Discussion

 The workshop was held across three days with all-group discussion
 slots, one per day.  The following topic areas were identified, and
 the program committee organized paper submissions into three main
 themes for each of the three discussion slots.  During each
 discussion, those papers were presented sequentially with open
 discussion held at the end of each day.

2.1. "Where We Are" - Requirements and Passive Observations

 The first day of the workshop focused on the existing state of the
 relationship between network management and encrypted traffic from
 various angles.  Presentations ranged from discussing classifiers
 using machine learning to recognize traffic, to advanced techniques
 for evading traffic analysis, to user privacy considerations.
 After an introduction that covered the goals of the workshop and the
 starting questions (as described in Section 1), there were four
 presentations followed by open discussion.

2.1.1. Traffic Classification and Network Management

 Many existing network management techniques are passive in nature:
 they don't rely on explicit signals from end hosts to negotiate with
 network middleboxes but instead rely on inspecting packets to
 recognize traffic and apply various policies.  Traffic
 classification, as a passive technique, is being challenged by
 increasing encryption.
 Traffic classification is commonly performed by networks to infer
 what applications and services are being used.  This information is
 in turn used for capacity and resource planning, Quality-of-Service
 (QoS) monitoring, traffic prioritization, network access control,
 identity management, and malware detection.  However, since
 classification commonly relies on recognizing unencrypted properties
 of packets in a flow, increasing encryption of traffic can decrease
 the effectiveness of classification.
 The amount of classification that can be performed on traffic also
 provides useful insight into how "leaky" the protocols used by
 applications are and points to areas where information is visible to
 any observer, who may or may not be malicious.
 Frequently, classification has been based on specific rules crafted
 by experts, but there is also a move toward using machine learning to
 recognize patterns.  "Deep learning" machine-learning models
 generally rely on analyzing a large set of traffic over time and have
 trouble reacting quickly to changes in traffic patterns.
 Models that are based on closed-world data sets also become less
 useful over time as traffic changes.  [JIANG] describes experiments
 that show that a model that performed with high accuracy on an
 initial data set becomes severely degraded when running on a newer
 data set that contains traffic from the same applications.  Even in
 as little time as one week, the traffic classification would become
 degraded.  However, the set of features in packets and flows that
 were useful for models stayed mostly consistent, even if the models
 themselves needed to be updated.  Models where the feature space is
 reduced to fewer features showed better resiliency and could be
 retrained more quickly.  Based on this, [JIANG] recommends more work
 and research to determine which set of features in IP packets are
 most useful for focused machine-learning analysis.  [WU] also
 recommends further research investment in Artificial Intelligence
 (AI) analysis for network management.

2.1.2. Preventing Traffic Analysis

 Just as traffic classification is continually adapting, techniques to
 prevent traffic analysis and to obfuscate application and user
 traffic are continually evolving.  An invited talk from the authors
 of [DITTO] shared a novel approach with the workshop for how to build
 a very robust system to prevent unwanted traffic analysis.
 Usually traffic obfuscation is performed by changing the timing of
 packets or by adding padding to data.  The practices can be costly
 and negatively impact performance.  [DITTO] demonstrated the
 feasibility of applying traffic obfuscation on aggregated traffic in
 the network with minimal overhead and inline speed.
 While traffic obfuscation techniques are not widely deployed today,
 this study underlines the need for continuous effort to keep traffic
 models updated over time, the challenges of the classification of
 encrypted traffic, as well as the opportunities to further enhance
 user privacy.

2.1.3. Users and Privacy

 The Privacy Enhancements and Assessments Research Group (PEARG) is
 working on a document to discuss guidelines for measuring traffic on
 the Internet in a safe and privacy-friendly way [LEARMONTH].  These
 guidelines and principles provide another view on the discussion of
 passive classification and analysis of traffic.
 Consent for collection and measurement of metadata is an important
 consideration in deploying network measurement techniques.  This
 consent can be given explicitly as informed consent, given by proxy,
 or may be only implied.  For example, a user of a network might need
 to consent to certain measurement and traffic treatment when joining
 a network.
 Various techniques for data collection can also improve user privacy,
 such as discarding data after a short period of time, masking aspects
 of data that contain user-identifying information, reducing the
 accuracy of collected data, and aggregating data.

2.1.4. Discussion

 The intents and goals of users, application developers, and network
 operators align in some cases, but not in others.  One of the
 recurring challenges that was discussed was the lack of a clear way
 to understand or to communicate intents and requirements.  Both
 traffic classification and traffic obfuscation attempt to change the
 visibility of traffic without cooperation of other parties: traffic
 classification is an attempt by the network to inspect application
 traffic without coordination from applications, and traffic
 obfuscation is an attempt by the application to hide that same
 traffic as it transits a network.
 Traffic adaptation and prioritization is one dimension in which the
 incentives for cooperation seem most clear.  Even if an application
 is trying to prevent the leaking of metadata, it could benefit from
 signals from the network about sudden capacity changes that can help
 it adapt its application quality, such as bitrates and codecs.  Such
 signaling may not be appropriate for the most privacy-sensitive
 applications, like Tor, but could be applicable for many others.
 There are existing protocols that involve explicit signaling between
 applications and networks, such as Explicit Congestion Notification
 (ECN) [RFC3168], but that has yet to see wide adoption.
 Managed networks (such as private corporate networks) were brought up
 in several comments as particularly challenging for meeting
 management requirements while maintaining encryption and privacy.
 These networks can have legal and regulated requirements for
 detection of specific fraudulent or malicious traffic.
 Personal networks that enable managed parental controls have similar
 complications with encrypted traffic and user privacy.  In these
 scenarios, the parental controls that are operated by the network may
 be as simple as a DNS filter, which can be made ineffective by a
 device routing traffic to an alternate DNS resolver.

2.2. "Where We Want to Go" - Collaboration Principles

 The second day of the workshop focused on the emerging techniques for
 analyzing, managing, or monitoring encrypted traffic.  Presentations
 covered advanced classification and identification, including
 machine-learning techniques, for the purposes of managing network
 flows or monitoring or monetizing usage.
 After an introduction that covered the goals of the workshop and the
 starting questions (as described in Section 1), there were three
 presentations, followed by open discussion.

2.2.1. First-Party Collaboration for Network Management

 It is the intent of end-to-end encryption of traffic to create a
 barrier between entities inside the communication channel and
 everyone else, including network operators.  Therefore, any attempt
 to overcome that intentional barrier requires collaboration between
 the inside and outside entities.  At a minimum, those entities must
 agree on the benefits of overcoming the barrier (or solving the
 problem), agree that costs are proportional to the benefits, and
 agree to additional limitations or safeguards against bad behavior by
 collaborators including other non-insiders [BARNES].
 The Internet is designed interoperably, which means an outside entity
 wishing to collaborate with the inside might be any number of
 intermediaries and not, say, a specific person that can be trusted in
 the human sense.  Additionally, the use of encryption, especially
 network-layer or transport-layer encryption, introduces dynamic or
 opportunistic or perfunctory discoverability.  These realities point
 to a need to ask why an outside entity might make an engineering case
 to collaborate with the user of a network with encrypted traffic and
 to ask whether the trade-offs and potential risks are worth it to the
 user.
 However, the answers cannot be specific, and the determinations or
 guidance need to be general as the encryption boundary is inevitably
 an application used by many people.  Trade-offs must make sense to
 users who are unlikely to be thinking about network management
 considerations.  Harms need to be preemptively reduced because, in
 general terms, few users would choose network management benefits
 over their own privacy if given the choice.
 Some have found that there appears to be little, if any, evidence
 that encryption causes network problems that are meaningful to the
 user.  Since alignment on problem solving is a prerequisite to
 collaboration on a solution, it does not seem that collaboration
 across the encryption boundary is called for.

2.2.2. Second- and Third-Party Collaboration for Network Management

 Even with the wide-scale deployment of encryption in new protocols
 and of techniques that prevent passive observers of network traffic
 from knowing the content of exchanged communications, important
 information, such as which parties communicate and sometimes even
 which services have been requested, may still be able to be deduced.
 The future is to conceal more data and metadata from passive
 observers and also to minimize information exposure to second parties
 (where the user is the first party) by, maybe counterintuitively,
 introducing third-party relay services to intermediate
 communications.  As discussed in [KUEHLEWIND], the relay is a
 mechanism that uses additional levels of encryption to separate two
 important pieces of information: knowledge of the identity of the
 person accessing a service is separated from knowledge about the
 service being accessed.  By contrast, a VPN uses only one level of
 encryption and does not separate identity (first party) and service
 (second party) metadata.
 Relay mechanisms are termed "oblivious", there is a future for
 specifications in privacy-preserving measurement (PPM), and protocols
 like Multiplexed Application Substrate over QUIC Encryption (MASQUE)
 are discussed in the IETF.  In various schemes, users are ideally
 able to share their identity only with the entity they have
 identified as a trusted one.  That data is not shared with the
 service provider.  However, this is more complicated for network
 management, but there may be opportunities for better collaboration
 between the network and, say, the application or service at the
 endpoint.
 A queriable relay mechanism could preserve network management
 functions that are disrupted by encryption, such as TCP optimization,
 quality of service, zero-rating, parental controls, access control,
 redirection, content enhancement, analytics, and fraud prevention.
 Instead of encrypting communication between only two ends with
 passive observation by all on-path elements, intermediate relays
 could be introduced as trusted parties that get to see limited
 information for the purpose of collaboration between in-network
 intermediary services.

2.2.3. Visible, Optional Network Management

 Out of all of the possible network management functions that might be
 ameliorated by proxying, the ability to control congestion in
 encrypted communications has been researched in depth.  These
 techniques are realized based on TCP performance-enhancing proxies
 (PEPs) that either entirely intercept a TCP connection or interfere
 with the transport information in the TCP header.  However, despite
 the challenge that the new encrypted protocol will limit any such in-
 network interference, these techniques can also have a negative
 impact on the evolvability of these protocols.  Therefore, a new
 approach was presented where, instead of manipulating existing
 information, additional information is sent using a so-called sidecar
 protocol independent of the main transport protocol that is used end
 to end [WELZL].  For example, sidecar information can contain
 additional acknowledgments to enable in-network local retransmission
 or faster end-to-end retransmission by reducing the signaling round-
 trip time.
 Taking user privacy benefits for granted, there is a need to
 investigate the comparable performance outputs of various encrypted
 traffic configurations such as the use of an additional sidecar
 protocol, or explicit encrypted and trusted network communication
 using MASQUE in relation to existing techniques such as TCP PEPs,
 etc.

2.2.4. Discussion

 One size fits all?  On the issue of trust, different networks or
 devices will have different trust requirements for devices, users, or
 each other, and vice versa.  For example, imagine two networks with
 really different security requirements, like a home network with a
 requirement to protect its child users versus a national security
 institution's network.  How could one network architecture solve the
 needs of all use cases?
 Does our destination have consequences?  It seems sometimes that
 there may be future consequences caused by the ubiquitous, strong
 encryption of network traffic because it will cause intermediaries to
 poke holes in what are supposed to be long-term solutions for user
 privacy and security.
 Can we bring the user along?  While there has been a focus on the
 good reasons why people might collaborate across the encryption
 barrier, there will always be others who want to disrupt that in
 order to exploit the data for their own gain, and sometimes
 exploitation is called innovation.  High-level policy mitigations
 have exposed how powerless end users are against corporate practices
 of data harvesting.  And yet interfaces to help users understand
 these lower-layer traffic flows to protect their financial
 transactions or privacy haven't been achieved yet.  That means that
 engineers must make inferences about user wants.  Instead, we should
 make these relationships and trade-offs more visible.

2.3. "How We Get There" - Collaboration Use Cases

 The third day focused on techniques that could be used to improve the
 management of encrypted networks.
 The potential paths forward described in the presentations included
 some element of collaboration between the networks and the
 subscribing clients that simultaneously want both privacy and
 protection.  Thus, the central theme of the third day became
 negotiation and collaboration.

2.3.1. Establishing Expected Contracts to Enable Security Management

 For enterprise networks where client behavior is potentially managed,
 [COLLINS] proposes "Improving network monitoring through contracts",
 where contracts describe different states of network behavior.
 Because network operators have a limited amount of time to focus on
 problems and process alerts, contracts and states let the operator
 focus on a particular aspect of a current situation or problem.  The
 current estimate for the number of events a Security Operations
 Center (SOC) operator can handle is about 10 per hour.  Operators
 must work within the limits imposed by their organization and must
 pick among options that frequently only frustrate attackers --
 preventing attacks entirely is potentially impossible.  Finally,
 operators must prioritize and manage the most events possible.
 Validating which alerts are true positives is challenging because
 lots of weird traffic creates many anomalies, and not all anomalies
 are malicious events.  Identifying which anomalous traffic is rooted
 in malicious activity with any level of certainty is extremely
 challenging.  Unfortunately, applying the latest machine-learning
 techniques has produced mixed results.  To make matters worse, the
 large amounts of Internet-wide scanning has resulted in endless
 traffic that is technically malicious but only creates an information
 overload and challenges event prioritization.  Any path forward must
 free up analyst time to concentrate on the more challenging events.
 The proposed contract solution is to define a collection of
 acceptable behaviors that comprises different states that might
 include IP addresses, domain names, and indicators of compromise.
 Deviation from a contract might indicate that a system is acting
 outside a normal mode of behavior or even that a normal mode of
 behavior is suddenly missing.  An example contract might be "this
 system is expected to update its base OS once a day".  If this
 doesn't occur, then this expectation has not been met, and the system
 should be checked as it failed to call home to look for (potentially
 security-related) updates.
 Within the IETF, the Manufacturer Usage Description Specification
 (MUD) [RFC8520] is one subset of contracts.  Note that contracts are
 likely to succeed only in a constrained, expected environment
 maintained by operational staff and may not work in an open Internet
 environment where end users drive all network connections.

2.3.2. Zero-Knowledge Middleboxes

 The world is not only shifting to increased encrypted traffic but is
 also encrypting more and more of the metadata (e.g., DNS queries and
 responses).  This makes network policy enforcement by middleboxes
 significantly more challenging.  The result is a significant tension
 between security enforcement and privacy protection.
 Goals for solving this problem should include enabling networks to
 enforce their policies, but should not include the weakening of
 encryption nor the deployment of new server software.  Existing
 solutions fail to meet at least one of these points.
 A cryptographic principle of a "zero-knowledge proof" (ZKP) [GRUBBS]
 may be one path forward to consider.  A ZKP allows a third party to
 verify that a statement is true without revealing what the statement
 actually is.  Applying this to network traffic has been shown to
 allow a middlebox to verify that traffic to a web server is compliant
 with a policy without revealing the actual contents.  This solution
 meets the three criteria listed above.  Using ZKP within TLS 1.3
 traffic turns out to be plausible.
 An example engine using encrypted DNS was built to test ZKP.  Clients
 were able to create DNS requests that were not listed within a DNS
 block list.  Middleboxes could verify, without knowing the exact
 request, that the client's DNS request was not on the prohibited
 list.  Although the result was functional, the computational overhead
 was still too slow, and future work will be needed to decrease the
 ZKP-imposed latencies.

2.3.3. Red Rover - a Collaborative Approach to Content Filtering

 The principle challenge being studied is how to handle the inherent
 conflict between filtering and privacy.  Network operators need to
 implement policies and regulations that can originate from many
 locations (e.g., security, governmental, parental, etc.).
 Conversely, clients need to protect their users' privacy and
 security.
 Safe browsing, originally created by Google, is one example of a
 mechanism that tries to meet both sides of this conflict.  It would
 be beneficial to standardize this and other similar mechanisms.
 Operating systems could continually protect their users by ensuring
 that malicious destinations are not being reached.  This would
 require some coordination between cooperating clients and servers
 offering protection services.  These collaborative solutions may be
 the best compromise to resolve the tension between privacy services
 and protection services [PAULY].

3. Conclusions

 Looking forward, the workshop participants identified that solving
 the entire problem space with a single approach will be challenging
 for several reasons:
  • The scalability of many solutions will likely be an issue as some

solutions are complex or expensive to implement.

  • Collaboration between multiple parties will be required for many

mechanisms to function, and the sets of parties required for

    different use cases might be disjoint.
  • There is an unanswered question of whether or not network

operators are willing to participate by allowing new encryption

    technologies into their environment in exchange for technologies
    that prove their clients are being good net-citizens.  If so, some
    of these solutions might be required to exist before networks
    allow a certain type of increased encryption; consider the example
    of TLS Encrypted Client Hello being blocked by some network
    operators.
 The breadth of the problem space itself is another complicating
 factor.  There is a wide variety of network architectures, and each
 has different requirements for both data encryption and network
 management.  Each problem space will have multiple, different
 encumbrances: for example, technical, legal, data ownership, and
 regulatory concerns.  New network architectures might be needed to
 solve this problem at a larger scope, which would in turn require
 interoperability support from network product vendors.  Education
 about various solutions will be required in order to ensure
 regulation and policy organizations can understand and thus support
 the deployment of developed solutions.
 After new technologies and related standards are developed and
 deployed, unintended consequences can emerge.  These lead to effects
 in multiple directions: on one hand, exposed protocol values not
 intended for network management might be used by networks to
 differentiate traffic; on the other hand, changes to a protocol that
 break existing use cases might have an impact on private network
 deployments.  While making decisions on technology direction and
 protocol design, it is important to consider the impact on various
 kinds of network deployments and their unique requirements.  When
 protocols change to make different network management functions
 easier or harder, the impact on various deployment models ought to be
 considered and documented.

4. Informative References

 [BARNES]   Barnes, R., "What's In It For Me? Revisiting the reasons
            people collaborate", August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-
            content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/Barnes-Whats-In-It-For-Me-
            Revisiting-the-reasons-people-collaborate.pdf>.
 [CASAS]    Casas, P., "Monitoring User-Perceived Quality in an
            Encrypted Internet - AI to the Rescue", August 2022,
            <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/Casas-
            AI-driven-real-time-QoE-monitoring-encrypted-traffic.pdf>.
 [COLLINS]  Collins, M., "Improving Network Monitoring Through
            Contracts", August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/
            IAB-uploads/2023/11/Collins-Improving-Network-Monitoring-
            Through-Contracts.pdf>.
 [DERI]     Deri, L., "nDPI Research Proposal", August 2022,
            <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/Deri-
            nDPI-Research-Proposal.pdf>.
 [DITTO]    Meier, R., Lenders, V., and L. Vanbever, "ditto: WAN
            Traffic Obfuscation at Line Rate", Network and Distributed
            Systems Security (NDSS) Symposium,
            DOI 10.14722/ndss.2022.24056, April 2022,
            <https://doi.org/10.14722/ndss.2022.24056>.
 [ELKINS]   Elkins, N., Ackermann, M., Tahiliani, M., Dhody, D., and
            T. Pecorella, "Performance Monitoring in Encrypted
            Networks: PDMv2", August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-
            content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/Elkins-Performance-Monitoring-
            in-Encrypted-Networks-PDMv2.pdf>.
 [GRUBBS]   Grubbs, P., Arun, A., Zhang, Y., Bonneau, J., and M.
            Walfish, "Zero-Knowledge Middleboxes", 31st USENIX
            Security Symposium (USENIX Security 22), August 2022,
            <https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity22/
            presentation/grubbs>.
 [HARDAKER] Hardaker, W., "Network Flow Management by Probability",
            August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
            uploads/2023/11/Hardaker-Encrypted-Traffic-
            Estimation.pdf>.
 [JIANG]    Jiang, X., Liu, S., Naama, S., Bronzino, F., Schmitt, P.,
            and N. Feamster, "Towards Designing Robust and Efficient
            Classifiers for Encrypted Traffic in the Modern Internet",
            August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
            uploads/2023/11/Jiang-Towards-Designing-Robust-and-
            Efficient-Classifiers-for-Encrypted-Traffic-in-the-Modern-
            Internet.pdf>.
 [KNODEL]   Knodel, M., "(Introduction) 'Guidelines for Performing
            Safe Measurement on the Internet'", August 2022,
            <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/
            Knodel-Guidelines-for-Performing-Safe-Measurement-on-the-
            Internet.pdf>.
 [KUEHLEWIND]
            Kuehlewind, M., Westerlund, M., Sarker, Z., and M. Ihlar,
            "Relying on Relays: The future of secure communication",
            June 2022, <https://www.ericsson.com/en/blog/2022/6/
            relays-and-online-user-privacy>.
 [LEARMONTH]
            Learmonth, I. R., Grover, G., and M. Knodel, "Guidelines
            for Performing Safe Measurement on the Internet", Work in
            Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-irtf-pearg-safe-internet-
            measurement-09, 12 January 2024,
            <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-irtf-pearg-
            safe-internet-measurement-09>.
 [LEI]      Lei, Y., Wu, J., Sun, X., Zhang, L., and Q. Wu, "Encrypted
            Traffic Classification Through Deep Learning", August
            2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/
            Lei-Encrypted-Traffic-Classification-Through-Deep-
            Learning.pdf>.
 [PAULY]    Pauly, T. and R. Barnes, "Red Rover: A collaborative
            approach to content filtering", August 2022,
            <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/Pauly-
            Red-Rover-A-collaborative-approach-to-content-
            filtering.pdf>.
 [RFC3168]  Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, "The Addition
            of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP",
            RFC 3168, DOI 10.17487/RFC3168, September 2001,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3168>.
 [RFC8520]  Lear, E., Droms, R., and D. Romascanu, "Manufacturer Usage
            Description Specification", RFC 8520,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8520, March 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8520>.
 [WELZL]    Welzl, M., "The Sidecar: 'Opting in' to PEP Functions",
            August 2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-
            uploads/2023/11/Welzl-The-Sidecar-Opting-in-to-PEP-
            Functions.pdf>.
 [WU]       Wu, Q., Wu, J., and Q. Ma, "Network Management of
            Encrypted Traffic: Detect it don't decrypt it", August
            2022, <https://www.iab.org/wp-content/IAB-uploads/2023/11/
            Wu-mten-taxonomy.pdf>.

Appendix A. Position Papers

 Interested participants were openly invited to submit position papers
 on the workshop topics, including Internet-Drafts, relevant academic
 papers, or short abstracts explaining their interest.  The papers
 below constitute the inputs that were considered relevant for
 workshop attendees and that focused the discussions themselves.  The
 program committee grouped the papers by theme.

A.1. Motivations and Principles

 Richard Barnes.  "What's In It For Me?  Revisiting the reasons people
 collaborate."  [BARNES]
 Mallory Knodel.  "(Introduction) 'Guidelines for Performing Safe
 Measurement on the Internet'."  (Additional rationale) [KNODEL]
 Qin Wu, Jun Wu, Qiufang Ma.  "Network Management of Encrypted
 Traffic: Detect it don't decrypt it."  [WU]

A.2. Classification and Identification of Encrypted Traffic

 Luca Deri. "nDPI Research Proposal."  [DERI]
 Wes Hardaker.  "Network Flow Management by Probability."  [HARDAKER]
 Xi Jiang, Shinan Liu, Saloua Naama, Francesco Bronzino, Paul Schmitt,
 Nick Feamster.  "Towards Designing Robust and Efficient Classifiers
 for Encrypted Traffic in the Modern Internet."  [JIANG]
 Yupeng Lei, Jun Wu, Xudong Sun, Liang Zhang, Qin Wu.  "Encrypted
 Traffic Classification Through Deep Learning."  [LEI]

A.3. Ideas for Collaboration and Coordination between Devices and

    Networks
 Michael Collins.  "Improving Network Monitoring Through Contracts."
 [COLLINS]
 Paul Grubbs, Arasu Arun, Ye Zhang, Joseph Bonneau, Michael Walfish.
 "Zero-Knowledge Middleboxes."  [GRUBBS]
 Mirja Kuehlewind, Magnus Westerlund, Zaheduzzaman Sarker, Marcus
 Ihlar.  "Relying on Relays: The future of secure communication."
 [KUEHLEWIND]
 Tommy Pauly, Richard Barnes.  "Red Rover: A collaborative approach to
 content filtering."  [PAULY]
 Michael Welzl.  "The Sidecar: 'Opting in' to PEP Functions."  [WELZL]

A.4. Other Background Material

 Pedro Casas.  "Monitoring User-Perceived Quality in an Encrypted
 Internet - AI to the Rescue."  [CASAS]
 Nalini Elkins, Mike Ackermann, Mohit P. Tahiliani, Dhruv Dhody, Prof.
 Tommaso Pecorella.  "Performance Monitoring in Encrypted Networks:
 PDMv2."  [ELKINS]

Appendix B. Workshop Participants

 The workshop participants were Cindy Morgan, Colin Perkins, Cullen
 Jennings, Deborah Brungard, Dhruv Dhody, Éric Vyncke, Georg Carle,
 Ivan Nardi, Jari Arkko, Jason Livingood, Jiankang Yao, Karen
 O'Donoghue, Keith Winstein, Lars Eggert, Laurent Vanbever, Luca Deri,
 Mallory Knodel, Marcus Ihlar, Matteo, Michael Collins, Michael
 Richardson, Michael Welzl, Mike Ackermann, Mirja Kühlewind, Mohit
 P. Tahiliani, Nalini Elkins, Patrick Tarpey, Paul Grubbs, Pedro
 Casas, Qin Wu, Qiufang Ma, Richard Barnes, Rob Wilton, Russ White,
 Saloua Naama, Shinan Liu, Srinivas C, Toerless Eckert, Tommy Pauly,
 Wes Hardaker, Xi Chase Jiang, Zaheduzzaman Sarker, and Zhenbin Li.

Appendix C. Program Committee

 The workshop program committee members were Wes Hardaker (IAB, USC/
 ISI), Mallory Knodel (IAB, Center for Democracy and Technology),
 Mirja Kühlewind (IAB, Ericsson), Tommy Pauly (IAB, Apple), Russ White
 (IAB, Juniper), Qin Wu (IAB, Huawei).

IAB Members at the Time of Approval

 Internet Architecture Board members at the time this document was
 approved for publication were:
    Dhruv Dhody
    Lars Eggert
    Wes Hardaker
    Cullen Jennings
    Mallory Knodel
    Suresh Krishnan
    Mirja Kühlewind
    Tommy Pauly
    Alvaro Retana
    David Schinazi
    Christopher Wood
    Qin Wu
    Jiankang Yao

Acknowledgments

 We wish to acknowledge the comments and suggestions from Elliot Lear
 and Arnaud Taddei for their comments and improvements to this
 document.

Authors' Addresses

 Mallory Knodel
 Email: mknodel@cdt.org
 Wes Hardaker
 Email: ietf@hardakers.net
 Tommy Pauly
 Email: tpauly@apple.com
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