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July 2024
- 5 participants
- 2 discussions
                    
                        Hi everyone,
I hope you're all doing well.
We've made some updates to the charter based on our last meeting's 
discussion and the feedback we received. We tried to incorporate 
everyone's suggestions as best as we could. Please take a few minutes to 
look over the revised charter. We would like to get your feedback until 
30th of August.
- snip -
The Security Working Group is committed to fostering collaboration, 
sharing best practices, and addressing security challenges within the 
RIPE community. The primary objective of the WG is to enhance the 
security, resilience, and stability of the Internet infrastructure 
within our region. Tackling abuse of Internet infrastructure and 
resources is a core goal of the WG, as well as:
- Collaborating with stakeholders to develop and advocate for best 
practices, guidelines, and standards for securing Internet resources
- Facilitating information sharing and cooperation among relevant entities
- Providing education, training, and outreach initiatives to raise 
awareness of security issues and promote best practices adoption
- snap -
Kind regards,
Brian, Tobias and Markus
                    
                  
                  
                          
                            
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                        Hi colleagues,
please find below the draft minutes from the Anti-Abuse Working Group 
session at RIPE 88.
If you have any comments, please email them to aa-wg-chair(a)ripe.net by 
the end of next week.
Have a nice weekend,
Markus de Brün
Tuesday, 21 May 2024, 16:00 – 17:30  (UTC+2)
Chairs: Brian Nisbet, Markus de Brün, Tobias Knecht
Scribe: Bryce Verdier
Status: Draft
The recordings and presentations are available at: 
https://ripe88.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/aa-wg/
The stenography transcript is available at:
https://ripe88.ripe.net/archives/steno/22/
# A. Administrative Matters
Brian opened the session, welcomed the attendees and set the agenda. The 
minutes from RIPE 87 were approved.
Markus stated that Brian’s term as Co-Chair was ending at the end of the 
meeting and that he was nominated to continue as Co-Chair. Markus asked 
if there were any objections and there were none. Brian was accepted as 
Co-Chair for another three year term and Markus thanked Brian.
Jim Reed said that he was glad that Brian was reappointed as Co-Chair 
and asked if there were term limits and if the group should think about 
creating them.
Markus answered that there weren’t any at the moment.
Brian mentioned that Mirjam was talking to other group chairs about 
implementing them but there weren’t a lot of people willing to be WG 
Chairs.
Jim Reed mentioned that during his time in the DNS WG, Co-Chairs gave a 
three year notice for the WG to come up with a succession plan.
Fergus Maccay, Flex Optics, suggested they use a secret voting process 
for Co-Chair approval. Brian noted Fergus’s suggestion and added that 
the names of people stepping forward were not announced until after the 
nomination phase to encourage more people to come forward.
Fergus responded that public voting was the problem and suggested a 
private vote. Jim Reed commented that decisions were made by consensus, 
not voting. Rüdiger Volk said that it was hard to have consensus with 
absolute privacy.
Brian said that the WG rules state that if consensus couldn’t be 
reached, then it forced a vote.
Malcom Hutty, LINX, mentioned that the consensus process was applicable 
to policy but didn’t have to apply to administrative matters.
Brian reminded the room that the WG Chair selection process for the 
Anti-Abuse WG was a vote if consensus could not be reached.
# D. Interactions
## D.1. Illegal Content Online: What's Our Role as a Regional Internet 
Registry
Maria Stafyla, RIPE NCC
The presentation is available at: 
https://ripe88.ripe.net/wp-content/uploads/presentations/58-RIPE-88-AntiAbu…
Maria gave a high level summary of what the RIPE NCC’s role is as a 
Regional Internet Registry and its involvement in addressing illegal 
online content. She highlighted that they help identify holders of 
Internet resources but they do not host or control third-party content. 
Discussions with stakeholders, including the European Commission, focus 
on combating piracy and other illegal activities, with debates about 
increasing RIPE NCC's responsibilities.
Malcom Hutty asked if it was still the RIPE NCC's policy to challenge 
and resist a court order being made in the first place.
Maria answered that the situation would be evaluated on a case by case 
basis, depending on the situation and that if they thought there were 
reasons to do it, she believed that they would.
Robert Carolina, General Counsel ISC, asked how, if at all, policy 
differed if the request came from a legal authority completely outside 
the European or Middle Eastern region. He questioned whether there would 
be no realistic chance of the requesting authority having legal 
jurisdiction over RIPE if they were farther afield.
Maria said that the RIPE NCC took action against members and resources 
in cases where they may be breaking their membership obligations and the 
RIPE NCC did take action on legally binding orders.
Hans Petter Hollen, Managing Director, RIPE NCC, commented on the 
questions being raised, noting that all cases would be treated on a 
case-by-case basis.
He said that the primary objective was to keep an accurate registry and 
using the registry to take action against nation states, organisations 
for political means or other means was something that the Board had 
stated clearly they did not want to do. He stressed that when it came to 
individual organisations breaking the law, the RIPE NCC had to follow 
Dutch law and follow valid court orders.
Alex Dioda, legal counsel OPL Six, asked whether the RIPE NCC would only 
abide by valid Dutch court orders or for court orders that have been 
transposed by Dutch courts.
Maria said that the RIPE NCC has an obligation to comply if it was a 
legally binding order and recognised in the Netherlands.
# E. Presentations
## E.1. Peering into the Darkness - The Use of UTRS in Combating DDoS 
Attacks Yury Zhauniarovich, TU Delft
The presentation is available at: 
https://ripe88.ripe.net/wp-content/uploads/presentations/39-20240521_ripe88…
Yury presented on using UTRS (Universal Traffic Removal Service) to 
combat DDoS attacks, combining network measurements and cybersecurity. 
He explained how RTBH (Remotely Triggered Black Hole) and UTRS block 
traffic to IPs under attack via trusted third parties like Team Cymru . 
His study with Yokohama National University found UTRS underutilised, 
with only 124 of 75,000 autonomous systems using it. Few DDoS attacks 
trigger UTRS announcements, often due to attack duration and intensity, 
indicating the service's effectiveness but limited adoption.
Brian asked why he thought nobody used the tool.
Yury said that he thought there were two main reasons, one is that it 
was not a stable service and that BGP flowspec was only introduced two 
years ago. He also thought that a lot of ASes had their own solutions 
from their upstreams and because they charge fees for this service, they 
didn’t have incentive to use the global and free service. Lastly, he 
said that it might drive more participation if the service was run by 
the community and not a company.
Rüdiger Volk, Retiree of Deutche Telekom, commented on the suspicions 
around network blackholing.  He said that the number of those who 
actually implemented the blackholing seems to be unknown.
Yury said that they had a follow up paper on this which will be 
presented on SIGMETRICS and he had also submitted a Lightning Talk on 
Friday to explain how they identified the members who actually abide by 
the blockings so they also know this number.
Rüdiger followed up with a question on whether the numbers from the 
report had a high or low percentage of users.
Yury said that around 600 ASes were actively blocking.
Rüdiger noted that modern methods can filter attack traffic from 
legitimate traffic. He added that those using such protections won't 
issue UTRS signals unless an attack overwhelms their usual defences.
Malcom Hutty asked about their data retention policy and whether they 
captured IP addresses for attack traffic and if so how long they kept 
them for and for what purposes.
Yury said that the source IP addresses were not gathered as it was spoof 
traffic.
# B. Update
## B.1 Recent List Discussion
The presentation is available at:
https://ripe88.ripe.net/wp-content/uploads/presentations/64-AA-WG-Slides-RI…
Brian and Markus presented a proposal to recharter the WG from 
Anti-Abuse to a broader security focus, addressing evolving 
cybersecurity concerns. The changes would cover emerging threats, best 
practices, and stakeholder collaboration. Mailing list feedback 
supported the transition but suggested explicitly mentioning RIPE NCC 
and clarifying the WG's policy role. They concluded by inviting further 
feedback to refine the draft charter.
Rüdiger Volk, retiree of Deutsche Telekom, said that there was less of a 
need to regulate the process since the RIPE community provides 
guidelines to the NCC in one form or the other. He added that there were 
already established activities in RIPE that are traditionally tackling 
serious security issues such as RPKI in the Routing WG.
Markus said that the idea was not to capture all topics related to 
security, but if there were security topics not falling under other WGs, 
then they could come under Anti-Abuse.
Brian clarified that there were many overlapping topics in many of the 
WGs, for example IPv6 turned up in Address Policy and in Routing and 
many topics cropped up in NCC Services. He said that this wasn’t an 
attempt to take over 50% of the WG slots.
Malcom Hutty raised concerns about the use of the word "policy" in the 
last bullet point, questioning whether it implies a formal RIPE 
community policy that would require a Policy Development Process (PDP). 
He highlighted the need to distinguish between best practices and 
policies and suggested that the term "policy" warranted careful 
consideration and scrutiny.
Tobias acknowledged the comment and asked how writing policies in this 
WG would be different from other Working Groups.
Malcom said that because security is more broad, the policy from 
Anti-Abuse might affect other WGs.
Tobias acknowledged and agreed with the comment. He countered that the 
NCC Services WG functions in the same way as the proposed charter change 
and said that the community is made up of those who want to be part of 
it and that the policy process would be the same in this WG as in other WGs.
Malcom said that expanding the community to be part of the rechartering 
might not be the best method.
Brian acknowledged the comment and responded that removing the ability 
to write policy would limit the WG’s ability to function.
Peter Koch, DeNIC, said that they needed to narrow the scope and broaden 
participation. He proposed explicitly stating in the charter that the 
group would be exempt from proposing policy due to the history of 
failure to reach consensus in the group. He said policies in RIPE WGs 
only make sense when they are enforceable and they are only enforceable 
if they are addressed by the RIPE NCC as its function as the 
secretariat. He added that this should be made clear so it attracts the 
right people and manages the expectations for this very necessary 
broadening of participation.
Dmytro Kohmanyuk supported the idea of a security-focused working group 
but suggested rechartering the Anti-Abuse WG if it had reached a 
plateau. He proposed that if rechartering involved significant changes 
in focus and working items, the RIPE Chair Team should be involved in 
the group's lifecycle discussion. He emphasised the importance of 
reconfirming the Chair Collective to include those with a security 
focus, ensuring that new members feel they belong and can contribute, 
while staggering this process to maintain continuity of work. He 
suggested considering the immediate or potential impact on NCC staff, 
time, and budget in discussions.
Alistair Woodman asked if any of the changes were predicated on what the 
EU was doing related to the Cyber Resiliency Act and other things in 
that area.
Brian said no but they were aware of the increasing EU regulatory 
regime, such as the Digital Services Act, which has been discussed 
across various working groups.
Alistair followed up by saying that they were leaning into the 
assumption that there's going to be more regulatory oversight from the EU.
Brian confirmed this.
Alistair said that they essentially wanted to throw their hat in the 
ring as an industry group that would actually be setting policies that 
would potentially deal with things at that European level.
Tobias affirmed that the European Commission was developing directives 
without adequate industry input due to poor self-regulation. He 
highlighted past policy failures leading to current DSA regulations and 
emphasised the opportunity for industry involvement in shaping 
legislative outcomes that align better with industry needs. Tobias 
cautioned that Commission decisions might not align well with community 
expectations if not properly engaged.
Alistair agreed, and said some folks in the room were potentially not 
comfortable with the idea of playing in the big leagues while some were 
which presented a challenge. He did agree with their thesis that if 
somebody didn’t step in, there would be a vacuum left there.
Brian said there were multiple ways of a WG creating influence and 
clarified that they weren’t intending to rule the world with the charter.
Niall O'Reilly, RIPE Vice Chair, said that at the beginning of the 
Policy Development Process, the most appropriate WG was identified to 
act as the vehicle for steering the process from proposal to consensus. 
He felt it was important that the exclusion of this WG as a potential 
vehicle for the PDP at this stage was inappropriate.
Niall continued, this time as a community member, to refer attendees to 
the silent Lighting Talk at RIPE 66. A key facet of consensus 
development is not to exclude, by systematic blindness or by failure to 
communicate, any significant stakeholder group. One responsibility of 
the WG Chairs was to make sure that nobody was left unheard who had a 
stake in the eventual decision. Lastly, Niall noted that the last bullet 
point could be reworded as "develop guidance to improve security" since 
guidance might be better neutral terminology.
Alex Dioda, AMS-IX, explained that he was a Board Member of EuroISPA 
which is a European association that lobbies in Brussels for the ISP 
industry and highlighted the lack of RIPE's presence in policy 
discussions at the EU level. He suggested more proactive engagement was 
needed.
Rüdiger Volk, expressed concern over the emphasis on policy in the WG's 
charter and suggested that providing guidance and best practices might 
be more appropriate and effective.
Peter Koch emphasised the need for improved engagement with broader 
security communities while highlighting the effective self-regulation 
within the community. He underscored the importance of clarifying the 
roles of this community and Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), citing 
the relevance of EU regulations like the Digital Services Act (DSA) to 
ISPs. Peter suggested exploring increased RIPE NCC presence in Brussels, 
subject to member support, and cautioned against mixing platform 
regulation with the group's primary objectives.
Tobias agreed to disagree that the community is good at self regulation 
and stated that the DSA was not only about platforms.
Jim Reid, community member, suggested renaming the WG to better reflect 
its focus, noting that "security" was too broad a term. He recommended 
simplifying the language in the charter and emphasising advisory roles 
rather than prescriptive policies.
Malcom Hutty, LINX, stated that achieving inclusivity was a high bar. 
Failing to meet this standard would make acceptance unlikely and 
undeserved. Therefore, he proposed policies should focus on the 
expertise and practical knowledge of active community members, not on 
ideas from occasional outsiders.
Brian Nisbet said feedback had been very useful and they needed to go 
and think about and come back in a nicely structured way on the mailing 
list. He said that attendees could find them on the list and to anyone 
who was worried, he added that they had been speaking extensively with 
Mirjam and Niall about this and they would continue to do so.
Brian said that around 100 people had completed the Anti-Abuse training, 
with more sessions planned for this year, with initial feedback being 
positive. He also thanked the stenographer, AV, Meetecho and NCC staff.
# X. AOB
No AOB.
# Z. Agenda for RIPE 89
No agenda items set for RIPE 89.
                    
                  
                  
                          
                            
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