<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
  <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
  <!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version  (Ruby 3.1.2) -->


<!DOCTYPE rfc  [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">

]>


<rfc ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-ietf-lamps-e2e-mail-guidance-09" category="info" submissionType="IETF">
  <front>
    <title>Guidance on End-to-End E-mail Security</title>

    <author initials="D. K." surname="Gillmor" fullname="Daniel Kahn Gillmor" role="editor">
      <organization abbrev="ACLU">American Civil Liberties Union</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>125 Broad St.</street>
          <city>New York, NY</city>
          <code>10004</code>
          <country>USA</country>
        </postal>
        <email>dkg@fifthhorseman.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="B." surname="Hoeneisen" fullname="Bernie Hoeneisen" role="editor">
      <organization>pEp Foundation</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Oberer Graben 4</street>
          <city>CH-8400 Winterthur</city>
          <country>Switzerland</country>
        </postal>
        <email>bernie.hoeneisen@pep.foundation</email>
        <uri>https://pep.foundation/</uri>
      </address>
    </author>
    <author initials="A." surname="Melnikov" fullname="Alexey Melnikov" role="editor">
      <organization>Isode Ltd</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>14 Castle Mews</street>
          <city>Hampton, Middlesex</city>
          <code>TW12 2NP</code>
          <country>UK</country>
        </postal>
        <email>alexey.melnikov@isode.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date year="2023" month="July" day="06"/>

    <area>int</area>
    <workgroup>lamps</workgroup>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>

    <abstract>


<t>End-to-end cryptographic protections for e-mail messages can provide useful security.
However, the standards for providing cryptographic protection are extremely flexible.
That flexibility can trap users and cause surprising failures.
This document offers guidance for mail user agent implementers to help mitigate those risks, and to make end-to-end e-mail simple and secure for the end user.
It provides a useful set of vocabulary as well as suggestions to avoid common failures.
It also identifies a number of currently unsolved usability and interoperability problems.</t>



    </abstract>

    <note title="About This Document" removeInRFC="true">
      <t>
        The latest revision of this draft can be found at <eref target="https://dkg.gitlab.io/e2e-mail-guidance/"/>.
        Status information for this document may be found at <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-lamps-e2e-mail-guidance/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>
        Discussion of this document takes place on the
        LAMPS Working Group mailing list (<eref target="mailto:spasm@ietf.org"/>),
        which is archived at <eref target="https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/spasm/"/>.
        Subscribe at <eref target="https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/spasm/"/>.
      </t>
      <t>Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
        <eref target="https://gitlab.com/dkg/e2e-mail-guidance"/>.</t>
    </note>


  </front>

  <middle>


<section anchor="introduction"><name>Introduction</name>

<t>E-mail end-to-end security using S/MIME (<xref target="RFC8551"/>) and PGP/MIME (<xref target="RFC3156"/>) cryptographic standards can provide integrity, authentication and confidentiality to MIME (<xref target="RFC4289"/>) e-mail messages.</t>

<t>However, there are many ways that a receiving mail user agent can misinterpret or accidentally break these security guarantees.
For example, <xref target="EFAIL"></xref>'s "Direct Exfiltration" attacks leak cleartext due to attacks that splice existing ciphertext into novel messages, which then are handled optimistically (and wrongly) by many mail user agents.</t>

<t>A mail user agent that interprets a message with end-to-end cryptographic protections needs to do so defensively, staying alert to different ways that these protections can be bypassed by mangling (either malicious or accidental) or a failed user experience.</t>

<t>A mail user agent that generates a message with end-to-end cryptographic protections should be aware of these defensive interpretation strategies, and should compose any new outbound message conservatively if they want the protections to remain intact.</t>

<t>This document offers guidance to the implementer of a mail user agent that provides these cryptographic protections, whether for sending or receiving mail.
An implementation that follows this guidance will provide its users with stronger and easier-to-understand security properties, and will also offer more reliable interoperability for messages exchanged with other implementations.</t>

<t>In <xref target="future-work"/>, this document also identifies a number of interoperability and usability concerns for end-to-end cryptographic e-mail which have no current broadly accepted technical standard for resolution.</t>

<t>The key words "<bcp14>MUST</bcp14>", "<bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>REQUIRED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHALL
NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14>", "<bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14>", "<bcp14>RECOMMENDED</bcp14>", "<bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14>",
"<bcp14>MAY</bcp14>", and "<bcp14>OPTIONAL</bcp14>" in this document are to be interpreted as
described in BCP 14 <xref target="RFC2119"/> <xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when, they
appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>

<section anchor="terminology"><name>Terminology</name>

<t>For the purposes of this document, we define the following concepts:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t><em>MUA</em> is short for Mail User Agent; an e-mail client.</t>
  <t><em>Protection</em> of message data refers to cryptographic encryption and/or signatures, providing confidentiality, authenticity, and/or integrity.</t>
  <t><em>Cryptographic Layer</em>, <em>Cryptographic Envelope</em>, <em>Cryptographic Payload</em>, <em>Cryptographic Summary</em>, and <em>Errant Cryptographic Layer</em> are defined in <xref target="cryptographic-structure"/></t>
  <t>A <em>well-formed</em> e-mail message with cryptographic protection has both a <em>Cryptographic Envelope</em> and a <em>Cryptographic Payload</em>.</t>
  <t><em>Structural Headers</em> are documented in <xref target="structural-headers"/>.</t>
  <t><em>User-Facing Headers</em> are documented in <xref target="user-facing-headers"/>.</t>
  <t><em>Main Body Part</em> is the part (or parts) that are typically rendered to the user as the message itself (not "as an attachment").  See <xref target="main-body-part"/>.</t>
</list></t>

<section anchor="structural-headers"><name>Structural Headers</name>

<t>A message header field named <spanx style="verb">MIME-Version</spanx>, or whose name begins with <spanx style="verb">Content-</spanx> is referred to in this document as a "structural" header.
This is a less-ambiguous name for what <xref target="RFC2045"/> calls "MIME Header Fields".</t>

<t>These headers indicate something about the specific MIME part they are attached to, and cannot be transferred or copied to other parts without endangering the readability of the message.</t>

<t>This includes:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t><spanx style="verb">MIME-Version</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Content-Type</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Content-Transfer-Encoding</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition</spanx></t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="user-facing-headers"><name>User-Facing Headers</name>

<t>Of all the headers that an e-mail message may contain, only a handful are typically presented directly to the user.
Typically, user-facing headers are:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t><spanx style="verb">Subject</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">From</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">To</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Cc</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Date</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Reply-To</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Followup-To</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Sender</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Resent-From</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Resent-To</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Resent-Cc</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Resent-Date</spanx></t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">Resent-Sender</spanx></t>
</list></t>

<t>The above list are the header fields most often presented directly to the user who views a message, though a MUA may also decide to treat any other header field as "user-facing".
Of course, many of these header fields are entirely absent from any given message, and an absent header field is not presented to the user at all.</t>

<t>Note that the resending header fields (those beginning with <spanx style="verb">Resent-</spanx>) are typically only added by an intervening MUA (see <xref section="3.6.6" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC5322"/> and <xref target="intervening-mua"/> of this document).
As such, though they may in some cases be presented to the user, they will typically not bear any end-to-end cryptographic protection (even if the original headers of a message are protected, see <xref target="message-headers"/>), because they are unknown to the original sender.</t>

<t>Other header fields may affect the visible rendering of the message (e.g., <spanx style="verb">References</spanx> and <spanx style="verb">In-Reply-To</spanx> may affect the placement of a message in a threaded discussion), but they are not directly displayed to the user and so are not considered "user-facing".</t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="usability"><name>Usability</name>

<t>Any MUA that enables its user to transition from unprotected messages to messages with end-to-end cryptographic protection needs to consider how the user understands this transition.
That said, the primary goal of the user of an MUA is communication -- so interface elements that get in the way of communication should be avoided where possible.</t>

<t>Furthermore, it is a near certainty that the user will continue to encounter unprotected messages, and may need to send unprotected messages (for example, if a given recipient cannot handle cryptographic protections).
This means that the MUA needs to provide the user with some guidance, so that they understand what protections any given message or conversation has.
But the user should not be overwhelmed with choices or presented with unactionable information.</t>

<section anchor="simplicity"><name>Simplicity</name>

<t>The end user (the operator of the MUA) is unlikely to understand complex end-to-end cryptographic protections on any e-mail message, so keep it simple.</t>

<t>For clarity to the user, any cryptographic protections should apply to the message as a whole, not just to some subparts.</t>

<t>This is true for message composition: the standard message composition user interface of an MUA should offer minimal controls which indicate which types of protection to apply to the new message as a whole.</t>

<t>This is also true for message interpretation: the standard message rendering user interface of an MUA should offer a minimal, clear indicator about the end-to-end cryptographic status of the message as a whole.</t>

<t>See <xref target="types-of-protection"/> for more detail about mental models and cryptographic status.</t>

<t>(It is of course possible that a message forwarded as a MIME attachment could have its own cryptographic status while still being a message subpart; but that status should be distinct from the status of the enclosing message.)</t>

</section>
<section anchor="similar-ux"><name>E-mail Users Want a Familiar Experience</name>

<t>A person communicating over the Internet today often has many options for reaching their desired correspondent, including web-based bulletin boards, contact forms, and instant messaging services.</t>

<t>E-mail offers a few distinctions from these other systems, most notably features like:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Ubiquity: Most correspondents will have an e-mail address, while not everyone is present on every alternate messaging service,</t>
  <t>Federation: interaction between users on distinct domains who have not agreed on a common communications provider is still possible, and</t>
  <t>User Control: the user can interact with the e-mail system using a MUA of their choosing, including automation and other control over their preferred and/or customized workflow.</t>
</list></t>

<t>Other systems (like some popular instant messaging applications, such as WhatsApp and Signal Private Messenger) offer built-in end-to-end cryptographic protections by default, which are simpler for the user to understand.
("All the messages I see on Signal are confidential and integrity-protected" is a clean user story)</t>

<t>A user of e-mail is likely using e-mail instead of other systems because of the distinctions outlined above.
When adding end-to-end cryptographic protection to an e-mail endpoint, care should be taken not to negate any of the distinct features of e-mail as a whole.
If these features are violated to provide end-to-end crypto, the user may just as well choose one of the other systems that don't have the drawbacks that e-mail has.
Implmenters should try to provide end-to-end protections that retain the familiar experience of e-mail itself.</t>

<t>Furthermore, an e-mail user is likely to regularly interact with other e-mail correspondents who <em>cannot</em> handle or produce end-to-end cryptographic protections.
Care should be taken that enabling cryptography in a MUA does not inadvertently limit the ability of the user to interact with legacy correspondents.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="security-indicators"><name>Warning About Failure vs. Announcing Success</name>

<t>Moving the web from http to https offers useful historical similarities to adding end-to-end encryption to e-mail.</t>

<t>In particular, the indicators of what is "secure" vs. "insecure" for web browsers have changed over time.
For example, years ago the default experience was http, and https sites were flagged with "secure" indicators like a lock icon.
In 2018, some browsers reversed that process by downplaying https, and instead visibly marking http as "not secure" (see <xref target="chrome-indicators"></xref>).</t>

<t>By analogy, when the user of a MUA first enables end-to-end cryptographic protection, it's likely that they will want to see which messages <em>have</em> protection.
But a user whose private e-mail communications with a given correspondent, or within a given domain are known to be entirely end-to-end protected might instead want to know which messages do <em>not</em> have the expected protections.</t>

<t>Note also that some messages may be expected to be confidential, but other messages are expected to be public -- the types of protection (see <xref target="types-of-protection"/>) that apply to each particular message will be different.
And the types of protection that are <em>expected</em> to be present in any context might differ (for example, by sender, by thread, or by date).</t>

<t>It is out of scope for this document to define expectations about protections for any given message, but an implementer who cares about usable experience should be deliberate and judicious about the expectations their interface assumes that the user has in a given context.
See also <xref target="expect-e2e"/> for future work.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="types-of-protection"><name>Types of Protection</name>

<t>A given message might be:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>signed,</t>
  <t>encrypted,</t>
  <t>both signed and encrypted, or</t>
  <t>none of the above.</t>
</list></t>

<t>Given that many e-mail messages offer no cryptographic protections, the user needs to be able to detect which protections are present for any given message.</t>

<section anchor="simple-mental-model"><name>Simplified Mental Model</name>

<t>To the extent that an e-mail message actually does have end-to-end cryptographic protections, those protections need to be visible and comprehensible to the end user.
If the user is unaware of the protections, then they do not extend all the way to the "end".</t>

<t>However, most users do not have (or want to have) a sophisticated mental model of what kinds of protections can be associated with a given message.
Even the four states above approach the limits of complexity for an interface for normal users.</t>

<t>While <xref target="no-encrypted-only"/> recommends avoiding deliberate creation of encrypted-only messages, some messages may end up in the encrypted-only state due to signature failure or certificate revocation.</t>

<t>A simple model for the user could be that a message is in one of three normal states:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Unprotected</t>
  <t>Verified (has a valid signature from the apparent sender of the message)</t>
  <t>Confidential (meaning, encrypted, with a valid signature from the apparent sender of the message)</t>
</list></t>

<t>And one error state:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Encrypted But Unverified (meaning, encrypted without a valid signature from the apparent sender of the message)</t>
</list></t>

<t>Note that this last state is not "Confidential" (a secret shared exclusively between the participants in the communication) because the recipient does not know for sure who sent it.</t>

<t>In an ecosystem where encrypted-only messages are never deliberately sent (see <xref target="no-encrypted-only"/>), representing an Encrypted But Unverified message as a type of user-visible error is not unreasonable.</t>

<t>Alternately, a MUA may prefer to represent the state of a Encrypted but Unverified message to the user as though it was Unprotected, since no verification is possible.
However the MUA represents the message to the user, though, it <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> leak cleartext of an encrypted message (even an Encrypted but Unverified message) in subsequent replies (see <xref target="composing-reply"/>) or similar replications of the message.</t>

<t>Note that a cleartext message with an invalid signature <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> be represented to the user as anything other than Unprotected (see <xref target="signature-failures"/>).</t>

<t>In a messy legacy ecosystem, a MUA may prefer instead to represent "Signed" and "Encrypted" as orthogonal states of any given message, at the cost of an increase in the complexity of the user's mental model.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="one-cryptographic-status-per-message"><name>One Cryptographic Status Per Message</name>

<t>Some MUAs may attempt to generate multiple copies of a given e-mail message, with different copies offering different types of protection (for example, opportunistically encrypting on a per-recipient basis).
A message resulting from this approach will have a cryptographic state that few users will understand.
Even if the sender understands the different statuses of the different copies, the recipients of the messages may not understand (each recipient might not even know about the other copies).
See for example the discussion in <xref target="mixed-recipients"/> for how this can go wrong.</t>

<t>For comprehensibility, a MUA <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> create multiple copies of a given message that differ in the types of end-to-end cryptographic protections afforded.</t>

<t>For opportunistic cryptographic protections that are not surfaced to the user (that is, that are not end-to-end), other mechanisms like transport encryption (<xref target="RFC3207"/>) or domain-based signing (<xref target="RFC6376"/>) may be preferable due to ease of implementation and deployment.
These opportunistic transport protections are orthogonal to the end-to-end protections described in this document.</t>

<t>To the extent that opportunistic message protections are made visible to the user for a given copy of a message, a reasonable MUA will distinguish that status from the message's end-to-end cryptographic status.
But the potential confusion caused by rendering this complex, hybrid state may not be worth the value of additional knowledge gained by the user.
The benefits of opportunistic protections accrue (or don't) even without visibility to the user (see <xref target="RFC7435"/>).</t>

<t>The user needs a single clear, simple, and correct indication about the end-to-end cryptographic status of any given message.
See <xref target="cryptographic-summary"/> for more details.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="cryptographic-structure"><name>Cryptographic MIME Message Structure</name>

<t>Implementations use the structure of an e-mail message to establish (when sending) and understand (when receiving) the cryptographic status of the message.
This section establishes some conventions about how to think about message structure.</t>

<section anchor="cryptographic-layer"><name>Cryptographic Layers</name>

<t>"Cryptographic Layer" refers to a MIME substructure that supplies some cryptographic protections to an internal MIME subtree.
The internal subtree is known as the "protected part" though of course it may itself be a multipart object.</t>

<t>In the diagrams below, <u>↧</u> indicates "decrypts to", and <u>⇩</u> indicates "unwraps to".</t>

<section anchor="smime-cryptographic-layers"><name>S/MIME Cryptographic Layers</name>

<t>For S/MIME <xref target="RFC8551"></xref>, there are four forms of Cryptographic Layers: multipart/signed, PKCS#7 signed-data, PKCS7 enveloped-data, PKCS7 authEnveloped-data.</t>

<section anchor="smime-multipart-signed"><name>S/MIME Multipart Signed Cryptographic Layer</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└┬╴multipart/signed; protocol="application/pkcs7-signature"
 ├─╴[protected part]
 └─╴application/pkcs7-signature
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer offers authentication and integrity.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="smime-pkcs7-signed-data"><name>S/MIME PKCS7 signed-data Cryptographic Layer</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="signed-data"
 ⇩ (unwraps to)
 └─╴[protected part]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer offers authentication and integrity.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="smime-pkcs7-enveloped-data"><name>S/MIME PKCS7 enveloped-data Cryptographic Layer</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="enveloped-data"
 ↧ (decrypts to)
 └─╴[protected part]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer offers confidentiality.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="smime-pkcs7-authenveloped-data"><name>S/MIME PKCS7 authEnveloped-data Cryptographic Layer</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="authEnveloped-data"
 ↧ (decrypts to)
 └─╴[protected part]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer offers confidentiality and integrity.</t>

<t>Note that <spanx style="verb">enveloped-data</spanx> (<xref target="smime-pkcs7-enveloped-data"/>) and <spanx style="verb">authEnveloped-data</spanx> (<xref target="smime-pkcs7-authenveloped-data"/>) have identical message structure and very similar semantics.
The only difference between the two is ciphertext malleability.</t>

<t>The examples in this document only include <spanx style="verb">enveloped-data</spanx>, but the implications for that layer apply to <spanx style="verb">authEnveloped-data</spanx> as well.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="pkcs7-compression-is-not-a-cryptographic-layer"><name>PKCS7 Compression is NOT a Cryptographic Layer</name>

<t>The Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) provides a MIME compression layer (<spanx style="verb">smime-type="compressed-data"</spanx>), as defined in <xref target="RFC3274"/>.
While the compression layer is technically a part of CMS, it is not considered a Cryptographic Layer for the purposes of this document.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="pgpmime-cryptographic-layers"><name>PGP/MIME Cryptographic Layers</name>

<t>For PGP/MIME <xref target="RFC3156"></xref> there are two forms of Cryptographic Layers, signing and encryption.</t>

<section anchor="pgpmime-multipart-signed"><name>PGP/MIME Signing Cryptographic Layer (multipart/signed)</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└┬╴multipart/signed; protocol="application/pgp-signature"
 ├─╴[protected part]
 └─╴application/pgp-signature
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer offers authenticity and integrity.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="pgpmime-multipart-encrypted"><name>PGP/MIME Encryption Cryptographic Layer (multipart/encrypted)</name>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
└┬╴multipart/encrypted
 ├─╴application/pgp-encrypted
 └─╴application/octet-stream
  ↧ (decrypts to)
  └─╴[protected part]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>This MIME layer can offer any of:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>confidentiality (via a Symmetrically Encrypted Data Packet, see <xref section="5.7" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC4880"/>; a MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> generate this form due to ciphertext malleability)</t>
  <t>confidentiality and integrity (via a Symmetrically Encrypted Integrity Protected Data Packet (SEIPD), see <xref section="5.13" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC4880"/>), or</t>
  <t>confidentiality, integrity, and authenticity all together (by including an OpenPGP Signature Packet within the SEIPD).</t>
</list></t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="cryptographic-envelope"><name>Cryptographic Envelope</name>

<t>The Cryptographic Envelope is the largest contiguous set of Cryptographic Layers of an e-mail message starting with the outermost MIME type (that is, with the Content-Type of the message itself).</t>

<t>If the Content-Type of the message itself is not a Cryptographic Layer, then the message has no cryptographic envelope.</t>

<t>"Contiguous" in the definition above indicates that if a Cryptographic Layer is the protected part of another Cryptographic Layer, the layers together comprise a single Cryptographic Envelope.</t>

<t>Note that if a non-Cryptographic Layer intervenes, all Cryptographic Layers within the non-Cryptographic Layer <em>are not</em> part of the Cryptographic Envelope.
They are Errant Cryptographic Layers (see <xref target="errant-cryptographic-layers"/>).</t>

<t>Note also that the ordering of the Cryptographic Layers implies different cryptographic properties.
A signed-then-encrypted message is different than an encrypted-then-signed message.
See <xref target="sign-then-encrypt"/>.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="cryptographic-payload"><name>Cryptographic Payload</name>

<t>The Cryptographic Payload of a message is the first non-Cryptographic Layer -- the "protected part" -- within the Cryptographic Envelope.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="types-of-cryptographic-envelope"><name>Types of Cryptographic Envelope</name>

<section anchor="simple-cryptographic-envelopes"><name>Simple Cryptographic Envelopes</name>

<t>As described above, if the "protected part" identified in the section above is not itself a Cryptographic Layer, that part <em>is</em> the Cryptographic Payload.</t>

<t>If the application wants to generate a message that is both encrypted and signed, it <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> use the simple MIME structure from <xref target="pgpmime-multipart-encrypted"/> by ensuring that the <xref target="RFC4880"></xref> Encrypted Message within the <spanx style="verb">application/octet-stream</spanx> part contains an <xref target="RFC4880"></xref> Signed Message (the final option described in <xref target="pgpmime-multipart-encrypted"/>).</t>

</section>
<section anchor="multilayer-cryptographic-envelopes"><name>Multilayer Cryptographic Envelopes</name>

<t>It is possible to construct a Cryptographic Envelope consisting of multiple layers with either S/MIME or PGP/MIME , for example using the following structure:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
A └─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="enveloped-data"
B  ↧ (decrypts to)
C  └─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="signed-data"
D   ⇩ (unwraps to)
E   └─╴[protected part]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>When handling such a message, the properties of the Cryptographic Envelope are derived from the series <spanx style="verb">A</spanx>, <spanx style="verb">C</spanx>.</t>

<t>As noted in <xref target="simple-cryptographic-envelopes"/>, PGP/MIME applications also have a simpler MIME construction available with the same cryptographic properties.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="errant-cryptographic-layers"><name>Errant Cryptographic Layers</name>

<t>Due to confusion, malice, or well-intentioned tampering, a message may contain a Cryptographic Layer that is not part of the Cryptographic Envelope.
Such a layer is an Errant Cryptographic Layer.</t>

<t>An Errant Cryptographic Layer <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> contribute to the message's overall cryptographic state.</t>

<t>Guidance for dealing with Errant Cryptographic Layers can be found in <xref target="errant-layers"/>.</t>

<section anchor="mailing-list-wrapping"><name>Mailing List Wrapping</name>

<t>Some mailing list software will re-wrap a well-formed signed message before re-sending to add a footer, resulting in the following structure seen by recipients of the e-mail:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
H └┬╴multipart/mixed
I  ├┬╴multipart/signed
J  │├─╴text/plain
K  │└─╴application/pgp-signature
L  └─╴text/plain
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>In this message, <spanx style="verb">L</spanx> is the footer added by the mailing list.  <spanx style="verb">I</spanx> is now an Errant Cryptographic Layer.</t>

<t>Note that this message has no Cryptographic Envelope at all.</t>

<t>It is <bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14> to produce e-mail messages with this structure, because the data in part <spanx style="verb">L</spanx> may appear to the user as though it were part of <spanx style="verb">J</spanx>, though they have different cryptographic properties.
In particular, if the user believes that the message is signed, but cannot distinguish <spanx style="verb">L</spanx> from <spanx style="verb">J</spanx> then the author of <spanx style="verb">L</spanx> can effectively tamper with content of the signed message, breaking the user's expectation of integrity and authenticity.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="baroque-example"><name>A Baroque Example</name>

<t>Consider a message with the following overcomplicated structure:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
M └┬╴multipart/encrypted
N  ├─╴application/pgp-encrypted
O  └─╴application/octet-stream
P   ↧ (decrypts to)
Q   └┬╴multipart/signed
R    ├┬╴multipart/mixed
S    │├┬╴multipart/signed
T    ││├─╴text/plain
U    ││└─╴application/pgp-signature
V    │└─╴text/plain
W    └─╴application/pgp-signature
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>The 3 Cryptographic Layers in such a message are rooted in parts <spanx style="verb">M</spanx>, <spanx style="verb">Q</spanx>, and <spanx style="verb">S</spanx>.
But the Cryptographic Envelope of the message consists only of the properties derived from the series <spanx style="verb">M</spanx>, <spanx style="verb">Q</spanx>.
The Cryptographic Payload of the message is part <spanx style="verb">R</spanx>.
Part <spanx style="verb">S</spanx> is an Errant Cryptographic Layer.</t>

<t>Note that this message has both a Cryptographic Envelope <em>and</em> an Errant Cryptographic Layer.</t>

<t>It is <bcp14>NOT RECOMMENDED</bcp14> to generate messages with such complicated structures.
Even if a receiving MUA can parse this structure properly, it is nearly impossible to render in a way that the user can reason about the cryptographic properties of part <spanx style="verb">T</spanx> compared to part <spanx style="verb">V</spanx>.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="cryptographic-summary"><name>Cryptographic Summary</name>

<t>The cryptographic status of an e-mail message with end-to-end cryptographic protections is known as the Cryptographic Summary.
A reasonable, simple Cryptographic Summary is derived from the aggregate properties of the layers in the Cryptographic Envelope.
This is a conceptual tool and a feature that a MUA can use to guide behavior and user experience, but it is not necessarily always directly exposed in any given user interface.
See <xref target="well-formed"/> for guidance and considerations about rendering the Cryptographic Summary to the user.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="message-composition"><name>Message Composition</name>

<t>This section describes the ideal composition of an e-mail message with end-to-end cryptographic protection.
A message composed with this form is most likely to achieve its end-to-end security goals.</t>

<section anchor="composition"><name>Message Composition Algorithm</name>

<t>This section roughly describes the steps that a MUA should use to compose a cryptographically-protected message that has a proper cryptographic envelope and payload.</t>

<t>The message composition algorithm takes three parameters:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t><spanx style="verb">origbody</spanx>: the traditional unprotected message body as a well-formed MIME tree (possibly just a single MIME leaf part).
As a well-formed MIME tree, <spanx style="verb">origbody</spanx> already has structural headers present (see <xref target="structural-headers"/>).</t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">origheaders</spanx>: the intended non-structural headers for the message, represented here as a list of <spanx style="verb">(h,v)</spanx> pairs, where <spanx style="verb">h</spanx> is a header field name and <spanx style="verb">v</spanx> is the associated value.</t>
  <t><spanx style="verb">crypto</spanx>: The series of cryptographic protections to apply (for example, "sign with the secret key corresponding to X.509 certificate X, then encrypt to X.509 certificates X and Y").
This is a routine that accepts a MIME tree as input (the Cryptographic Payload), wraps the input in the appropriate Cryptographic Envelope, and returns the resultant MIME tree as output.</t>
</list></t>

<t>The algorithm returns a MIME object that is ready to be injected into the mail system:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Apply <spanx style="verb">crypto</spanx> to <spanx style="verb">origbody</spanx>, yielding MIME tree <spanx style="verb">output</spanx></t>
  <t>For each header name and value <spanx style="verb">(h,v)</spanx> in <spanx style="verb">origheaders</spanx>:
  <list style="symbols">
      <t>Add header <spanx style="verb">h</spanx> to <spanx style="verb">output</spanx> with value <spanx style="verb">v</spanx></t>
    </list></t>
  <t>Return <spanx style="verb">output</spanx></t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="sign-then-encrypt"><name>Encryption Outside, Signature Inside</name>

<t>Users expect any message that is both signed and encrypted to be signed <em>inside</em> the encryption, and not the other way around.
For example, when crafting an encrypted and signed message using a simple Cryptographic Envelope of a single layer (<xref target="simple-cryptographic-envelopes"/>) with PGP/MIME, the OpenPGP Encrypted Message object should contain an OpenPGP Signed Message.
Likewise, when using a multilayer Cryptographic Envelope (<xref target="multilayer-cryptographic-envelopes"/>), the outer layer should be an encryption layer and the inner layer should be a signing layer.</t>

<t>Putting the signature inside the encryption has two advantages:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The details of the signature remain confidential, visible only to the parties capable of decryption.</t>
  <t>Any mail transport agent that modifies the message is unlikely to be able to accidentally break the signature.</t>
</list></t>

<t>A MUA <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> generate an encrypted and signed message where the only signature is outside the encryption.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="no-encrypted-only"><name>Avoid Offering Encrypted-only Messages</name>

<t>When generating an e-mail, the user has options about what forms of end-to-end cryptographic protections to apply to it.</t>

<t>In some cases, offering any end-to-end cryptographic protection is harmful: it may confuse the recipient and offer no benefit.</t>

<t>In other cases, signing a message is useful (authenticity and integrity are desirable) but encryption is either impossible (for example, if the sender does not know how to encrypt to all recipients) or meaningless (for example, an e-mail message to a mailing list that is intended to be be published to a public archive).</t>

<t>In other cases, full end-to-end confidentiality, authenticity, and integrity are desirable.</t>

<t>It is unclear what the use case is for an e-mail message with end-to-end confidentiality but without authenticity or integrity.</t>

<t>A reasonable MUA will keep its message composition interface simple, so when presenting the user with a choice of cryptographic protection, it <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> offer no more than three choices:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>no end-to-end cryptographic protection</t>
  <t>Verified (signed only)</t>
  <t>Confidential (signed and encrypted)</t>
</list></t>

<t>Note that these choices correspond to the simplified mental model in <xref target="simple-mental-model"/>.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="composing-reply"><name>Composing a Reply Message</name>

<t>When replying to a message, most MUAs compose an initial draft of the reply that contains quoted text from the original message.
A responsible MUA will take precautions to avoid leaking the cleartext of an encrypted message in such a reply.</t>

<t>If the original message was end-to-end encrypted, the replying MUA <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> either:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>compose the reply with end-to-end encryption, or</t>
  <t>avoid including quoted text from the original message.</t>
</list></t>

<t>In general, MUAs <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> prefer the first option: to compose an encrypted reply.
This is what users expect.</t>

<t>However, in some circumstances, the replying MUA cannot compose an encrypted reply.
For example, the MUA might not have a valid, unexpired, encryption-capable certificate for all recipients.
This can also happen during composition when a user adds a new recipient into the reply, or manually toggles the cryptographic protections to remove encryption.</t>

<t>In this circumstance, the composing MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> strip the quoted text from the original message.</t>

<t>Note additional nuance about replies to malformed messages that contain encryption in <xref target="reply-to-errant-encryption"/>.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="message-interpretation"><name>Message Interpretation</name>

<t>Despite the best efforts of well-intentioned senders to create e-mail messages with well-formed end-to-end cryptographic protection, receiving MUAs will inevitably encounter some messages with malformed end-to-end cryptographic protection.</t>

<t>This section offers guidance on dealing with both well-formed and malformed messages containing Cryptographic Layers.</t>

<section anchor="well-formed"><name>Rendering Well-formed Messages</name>

<t>A message is well-formed when it has a Cryptographic Envelope, a Cryptographic Payload, and no Errant Cryptographic Layers.
Rendering a well-formed message is straightforward.</t>

<t>The receiving MUA should evaluate and assemble the cryptographic properties of the Cryptographic Envelope into a Cryptographic Summary and display that status to the user in a secure, strictly-controlled part of the UI.
In particular, the part of the UI used to render the Cryptographic Summary of the message <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> be spoofable, modifiable, or otherwise controllable by the received message itself.</t>

<t>Aside from this Cryptographic Summary, the message itself should be rendered as though the Cryptographic Payload is the body of the message.
The Cryptographic Layers themselves <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> not be rendered otherwise.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="errant-layers"><name>Errant Cryptographic Layers</name>

<t>If an incoming message has any Errant Cryptographic Layers, the interpreting MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> ignore those layers when rendering the Cryptographic Summary of the message to the user.</t>

<section anchor="errant-signing-layer"><name>Errant Signing Layer</name>

<t>When rendering a message with an Errant Cryptographic Layer that provides authenticity and integrity (via signatures), the message should be rendered by replacing the Cryptographic layer with the part it encloses.</t>

<t>For example, a message with this structure:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
A └┬╴multipart/mixed
B  ├╴text/plain
C  ├┬╴multipart/signed
D  │├─╴image/jpeg
E  │└─╴application/pgp-signature
F  └─╴text/plain
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>Should be rendered identically to this:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
A └┬╴multipart/mixed
B  ├─╴text/plain
D  ├─╴image/jpeg
F  └─╴text/plain
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>In such a situation, an MUA <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> indicate in the Cryptographic Summary that the message is signed.</t>

<section anchor="exception-mailing-list-footers"><name>Exception: Mailing List Footers</name>

<t>The use case described in <xref target="mailing-list-wrapping"/> is common enough in some contexts, that a MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> decide to handle it as a special exception.</t>

<t>If the MUA determines that the message comes from a mailing list (for example, it has a <spanx style="verb">List-ID</spanx> header), and it has a structure that appends a footer to a signing-only Cryptographic Layer with a valid signature, such as:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
H └┬╴multipart/mixed
I  ├┬╴multipart/signed
J  │├─╴[protected part, may be arbitrary MIME subtree]
K  │└─╴application/{pgp,pkcs7}-signature
L  └─╴[footer, typically text/plain]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>or:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
H └┬╴multipart/mixed
I  ├─╴application/pkcs7-mime; smime-type="signed-data"
   │⇩ (unwraps to)
J  │└─╴[protected part, may be an arbitrary MIME subtree]
L  └─╴[footer, typically text/plain]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>Then, the MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> indicate to the user that this is a signed message that has been wrapped by the mailing list.</t>

<t>In this case, the MUA <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> distinguish the footer (part <spanx style="verb">L</spanx>) from the protected part (part <spanx style="verb">J</spanx>) when rendering any information about the signature.</t>

<t>One way to do this is to offer the user two different views of the message: the "mailing list" view, which hides any Cryptographic Summary but shows the footer:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
Cryptographic Protections: none
H └┬╴multipart/mixed
J  ├─╴[protected part, may be arbitrary MIME subtree]
L  └─╴[footer, typically text/plain]
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>or the "sender's view", which shows the Cryptographic Summary but hides the footer:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
Cryptographic Protections: signed [details from part I]
J └─╴[protected part, may be arbitrary MIME subtree]
]]></artwork></figure>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="errant-encryption-layer"><name>Errant Encryption Layer</name>

<t>An MUA may encounter a message with an Errant Cryptographic Layer that offers confidentiality (encryption), and the MUA is capable of decrypting it.</t>

<t>The user wants to be able to see the contents of any message that they receive, so an MUA in this situation <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> decrypt the part.</t>

<t>In this case, though, the MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> indicate in the message's Cryptographic Summary that the message itself was encrypted.
Such an indication could be taken to mean that other (non-encrypted) parts of the message arrived with cryptographic confidentiality.</t>

<t>Furthermore, when decrypting an Errant Cryptographic Layer, the MUA <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> treat the decrypted cleartext as a distinct MIME subtree, and not attempt to merge or splice it together with any other part of the message.
This offers protection against the direct exfiltration (also known as EFAIL-DE) attacks described in <xref target="EFAIL"></xref> and so-called <spanx style="verb">multipart/oracle</spanx> attacks described in <xref target="ORACLE"></xref>.</t>

<section anchor="reply-to-errant-encryption"><name>Replying to a Message with an Errant Encryption Layer</name>

<t>Note that there is an asymmetry here between rendering and replying to a message with an Errant Encryption Layer.</t>

<t>When rendering, the MUA does not indicate that the message was encrypted, even if some subpart of it was decrypted for rendering.</t>

<t>When composing a reply to a message that has any encryption layer, even an errant one, the reply message <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be marked for encryption, as noted in <xref target="composing-reply"/>.</t>

<t>When composing a reply to a message with an errant cryptographic layer, the MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> decrypt any errant cryptographic layers when generating quoted or attributed text.
This will typically mean either leaving the ciphertext itself in the generated reply message, or simply no generating any quoted or attributed text at all.
This offers protection against the reply-based attacks described in <xref target="EFAIL"></xref>.</t>

<t>In all circumstances, if the reply message cannot be encrypted (or if the user elects to not encrypt the reply), the composed reply <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> include any material from the decrypted subpart.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="avoiding-non-mime-cryptographic-mechanisms"><name>Avoiding Non-MIME Cryptographic Mechanisms</name>

<t>In some cases, there may be a cryptographic signature or encryption that does not coincide with a MIME boundary.
For example so-called "PGP Inline" messages typically contain base64-encoded ("ASCII-armored", see <xref section="6" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC4880"/>) ciphertext, or within the content of a MIME part.</t>

<section anchor="do-not-validate-non-mime-signatures"><name>Do Not Validate Non-MIME Signatures</name>

<t>When encountering cryptographic signatures in these positions, a MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> attempt to validate any signature.
It is challenging to communicate to the user exactly which part of such a message is covered by the signature, so it is better to leave the message marked as unsigned.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="skip-or-isolate-non-mime-decryption-when-rendering"><name>Skip or Isolate Non-MIME Decryption When Rendering</name>

<t>When encountering what appears to be encrypted data not at a MIME boundary, the MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> decline to decrypt the data at all.</t>

<t>During message rendering, if the MUA attempts decryption of such a non-MIME encrypted section of an e-mail, it <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> synthesize a separate MIME part to contain only the decrypted data, and not attempt to merge or splice that part together with any other part of the message.
Keeping such a section distinct and isolated from any other part of the message offers protection against the direct exfiltration attacks (also known as EFAIL-DE) described in <xref target="EFAIL"></xref>.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="do-not-decrypt-non-mime-decryption-when-replying"><name>Do Not Decrypt Non-MIME Decryption when Replying</name>

<t>When composing a reply to a message with such a non-MIME encrypted section, the MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> decrypt the any non-MIME encrypted section when generating quoted or attributed text, similar to the guidance in <xref target="reply-to-errant-encryption"/>.</t>

<t>This offers protection against the reply-based attacks described in <xref target="EFAIL"></xref>.</t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="forwarded-messages-with-cryptographic-protection"><name>Forwarded Messages with Cryptographic Protection</name>

<t>An incoming e-mail message may include an attached forwarded message, typically as a MIME subpart with <spanx style="verb">Content-Type: message/rfc822</spanx> (<xref target="RFC5322"/>) or <spanx style="verb">Content-Type: message/global</spanx> (<xref target="RFC5355"/>).</t>

<t>Regardless of the cryptographic protections and structure of the incoming message, the internal forwarded message may have its own Cryptographic Envelope.</t>

<t>The Cryptographic Layers that are part of the Cryptographic Envelope of the forwarded message are not Errant Cryptographic Layers of the surrounding message -- they are simply layers that apply to the forwarded message itself.</t>

<t>The rendering MUA <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> conflate the cryptographic protections of the forwarded message with the cryptographic protections of the incoming message.</t>

<t>The rendering MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> render a Cryptographic Summary of the protections afforded to the forwarded message by its own Cryptographic Envelope, as long as that rendering is unambiguously tied to the forwarded message itself, and cannot be spoofed either by the enclosing message or by the forwarded message.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="signature-failures"><name>Signature failures</name>

<t>A cryptographic signature may fail in multiple ways.
A receiving MUA that discovers a failed signature should treat the message as though the signature did not exist.
This is similar to the standard guidance for about failed DKIM signatures (see <xref section="6.1" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC6376"/>).</t>

<t>A MUA <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> render a message with a failed signature as more dangerous or more dubious than a comparable message without any signature at all.</t>

<t>A MUA that encounters an encrypted-and-signed message where the signature is invalid <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> treat the message the same way that it would treat a message that is encryption-only.</t>

<t>Some different ways that a signature may be invalid on a given message:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>the signature is not cryptographically valid (the math fails).</t>
  <t>the signature relies on suspect cryptographic primitives (e.g. over a legacy digest algorithm, or was made by a weak key, e.g., 1024-bit RSA)</t>
  <t>the signature is made by a certificate which the receiving MUA does not have access to.</t>
  <t>the certificate used to verify the signature was revoked.</t>
  <t>the certificate used to verify the signature was expired at the time that the signature was made.</t>
  <t>the certificate used to verify the signature does not correspond to the author of the message. (for X.509, there is no subjectAltName of type RFC822Name whose value matches an e-mail address found in <spanx style="verb">From:</spanx> or <spanx style="verb">Sender:</spanx>)</t>
  <t>the certificate used to verify the signature was not issued by an authority that the MUA user is willing to rely on for certifying the sender's e-mail address, and the user has no other reasonable indication that the certificate belongs to the sender's e-mail address.</t>
  <t>the signature indicates that it was made at a time much before or much after from the date of the message itself.</t>
  <t>The signature covers a message that depends on an external subresource that might change (see <xref target="external-subresources"/>).</t>
</list></t>

<t>A valid signature must pass all these tests, but of course invalid signatures may be invalid in more than one of the ways listed above.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="reasoning-about-message-parts"><name>Reasoning about Message Parts</name>

<t>When generating or rendering messages, it is useful to know what parts of the message are likely to be displayed, and how.
This section introduces some common terms that can be applied to parts within the Cryptographic Payload.</t>

<section anchor="main-body-part"><name>Main Body Part</name>

<t>When an e-mail message is composed or rendered to the user there is typically one main view that presents a (mostly textual) part of the message.</t>

<t>While the message itself may be constructed of several distinct MIME parts in a tree, the part that is rendered to the user is the "Main Body Part".</t>

<t>When rendering a message, one of the primary jobs of the receiving MUA is identifying which part (or parts) is the Main Body Part.
Typically, this is found by traversing the MIME tree of the message looking for a leaf node that has a primary content type of <spanx style="verb">text</spanx> (e.g. <spanx style="verb">text/plain</spanx> or <spanx style="verb">text/html</spanx>) and is not <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition: attachment</spanx>.</t>

<t>MIME tree traversal follows the first child of every <spanx style="verb">multipart</spanx> node, with the exception of <spanx style="verb">multipart/alternative</spanx>.
When traversing a <spanx style="verb">multipart/alternative</spanx> node, all children should be scanned, with preference given to the last child node with a MIME type that the MUA is capable of rendering directly.</t>

<t>A MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> offer the user a mechanism to prefer a particular MIME type within <spanx style="verb">multipart/alternative</spanx> instead of the last renderable child.
For example, a user may explicitly prefer a <spanx style="verb">text/plain</spanx> alternative part over <spanx style="verb">text/html</spanx>.</t>

<t>Note that due to uncertainty about the capabilities and configuration of the receiving MUA, the composing MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> consider that multiple parts might be rendered as the Main Body Part when the message is ultimately viewed.</t>

<t>When composing a message, an originating MUA operating on behalf of an active user can identify which part (or parts) are the "main" parts: these are the parts the MUA generates from the user's editor.
Tooling that automatically generates e-mail messages should also have a reasonable estimate of which part (or parts) are the "main" parts, as they can be programmatically identified by the message author.</t>

<t>For a filtering program that attempts to transform an outbound message without any special knowledge about which parts are Main Body Parts, it can identify the likely parts by following the same routine as a receiving MUA.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="attachments"><name>Attachments</name>

<t>A message may contain one or more separated MIME parts that are intended for download or extraction.
Such a part is commonly called an "attachment", and is commonly identified by having <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition: attachment</spanx>.</t>

<t>An MUA <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> identify a subpart as an attachment, or permit extraction of a subpart even when the subpart does not have <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition: attachment</spanx>.</t>

<t>For a message with end-to-end cryptographic protection, any attachment <em><bcp14>MUST</bcp14></em> be included within the Cryptographic Payload.
If an attachment is found outside the Cryptographic Payload, then the message is not well-formed (see <xref target="well-formed"/>).</t>

<t>Some MUAs have tried to compose messages where each attachment is placed in its own cryptographic envelope.
Such a message is problematic for several reasons:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The attachments can be stripped, replaced, or reordered without breaking any cryptographic integrity mechanism.</t>
  <t>The resulting message may have a mix of cryptographic statuses (e.g. if a signature on one part fails but another succeeds, or if one part is encrypted and another is not).
This mix of statuses is difficult to represent to the user in a comprehensible way.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="mime-part-examples"><name>MIME Part Examples</name>

<t>Consider a common message with the folloiwing MIME structure:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
M └─╴application/pkcs7-mime
   ↧ (decrypts to)
N  └─╴application/pkcs7-mime
    ⇩ (unwraps to)
O   └┬╴multipart/mixed
P    ├┬╴multipart/alternative
Q    │├─╴text/plain
R    │└─╴text/html
S    └─╴image/png
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>Parts M and N comprise the Cryptographic Envelope.</t>

<t>Parts Q and R are both Main Body Parts.</t>

<t>If part S is <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition: attachment</spanx>, then it is an attachment.
If part S has no <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition</spanx> header, it is potentially ambiguous whether it is an attachment or not.
If the sender prefers a specific behavior, it should explicitly set the <spanx style="verb">Content-Disposition</spanx> header on part S to either <spanx style="verb">inline</spanx> or <spanx style="verb">attachment</spanx> as guidance to the receiving MUA.</t>

<t>Consider also this alternate structure:</t>

<figure><artwork><![CDATA[
M └─╴application/pkcs7-mime
   ↧ (decrypts to)
N  └─╴application/pkcs7-mime
    ⇩ (unwraps to)
O   └┬╴multipart/alternative
P    ├─╴text/plain
Q    └┬╴multipart/related
R     ├─╴text/html
S     └─╴image/png
]]></artwork></figure>

<t>In this case, parts M and N are still the Cryptographic Envelope.</t>

<t>Parts P and R (the first two leaf nodes within each subtree of part O) are the Main Body Parts.</t>

<t>Part S is more likely not to be an attachment, as the subtree layout suggests that it is only relevant for the HTML version of the message.
For example, it might be rendered as an image within the HTML alternative.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="cert-management"><name>Certificate Management</name>

<t>A cryptographically-capable MUA typically maintains knowledge about certificates for the user's own account(s), as well as certificates for the peers that it communicates with.</t>

<section anchor="peer-certificates"><name>Peer Certificates</name>

<t>Most certificates that a cryptographically-capable MUA will use will be certificates belonging to the parties that the user communicates with through the MUA.
This section discusses how to manage the certificates that belong to such a peer.</t>

<t>The MUA will need to be able to discover X.509 certificates for each peer, cache them, and select among them when composing an encrypted message.</t>

<t>Detailed guidance about how to do this is beyond the scope of this document, but future revisions may bring it into scope (see <xref target="more-peer-certs"/>).</t>

<section anchor="peer-cert-selection"><name>Peer Certificate Selection</name>

<t>When composing an encrypted message, the MUA needs to select an encryption-capable certificate for each recipient.</t>

<t>To select such a certificate for a given destination e-mail address, the MUA should look through all of its known certificates and verify that <em>all</em> of the conditions below are met:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The certificate must be valid, not expired or revoked.</t>
  <t>It must have a subjectAltName of type rFC822Name whose contents match the destination address.
In particular, the local-part of the two addresses should be an exact bytewise match, and the domain parts of the two addresses should be matched by ensuring label equivalence across the full domain name, as described in <xref section="2.3.2.4" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC5890"/>.</t>
  <t>The algorithm OID in the certificate's SPKI is known to the MUA and capable of encryption.
Examples include:
  <list style="symbols">
      <t>rsaEncryption (OID 1.2.840.113549.1.1.1), with keyUsage (OID 2.5.29.15) extension present and the "key encipherment" bit (value 32) set.</t>
      <t>curveX25519 (OID 1.3.101.110) with keyUsage extension present and the "key agreement" bit (value 8) set.</t>
    </list></t>
  <t>If extendedKeyUsage (OID 2.5.29.37) is present, it contains at least one of the following OIDs: e-mail protection (OID 1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.4), anyExtendedKeyUsage(OID 2.5.29.37.0).</t>
</list></t>

<t>A reasonable MUA may include more considerations when selecting a peer certificate as well, see <xref target="more-peer-cert-selection"/> for examples.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="local-certificates"><name>Local Certificates</name>

<t>The MUA also needs to know about one or more certificates associated with the user's e-mail account.
It is typically expected to have access to the secret key material associated with the public keys in those certificates.</t>

<t>While some basic guidance is offered here, it is beyond the scope of this document to describe all possible relevant guidance for local certificate and key material handling.
See <xref target="more-local-certs"/> for suggestions of guidance that a future version might bring into scope.</t>

<section anchor="local-certificate-setup"><name>Getting Certificates for the User</name>

<t>If the MUA does not have any certificate or secret key for the user, it <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> help the user to generate, acquire, or import them with a minimum of difficulty.</t>

<section anchor="local-cert-smime"><name>User Certificates for S/MIME</name>

<t>For S/MIME, the user <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> have both a signing-capable certificate and an encryption-capable certificate (and the corresponding secret keys).
Using the same cryptographic key material for multiple algorithms (i.e., for both encryption and signing) has been the source of vulnerabilities in other (non-e-mail) contexts (e.g., <xref target="DROWN"/> and <xref target="IKE"/>).
The simplest way to avoid any comparable risk is to use distinct key material for each cryptographic algorithm.
The MUA <bcp14>SHOULD NOT</bcp14> encourage the use of a single S/MIME certificate for both encryption and signing, to avoid possible cross-protocol key misuse.</t>

<t>The simplest option for an S/MIME-capable MUA is for the MUA to permit the user to import a PKCS #12 (<xref target="RFC7292"/>) object that is expected to contain secret key material, end entity certificates for the user, and intermediate certification authority certificates that permit chaining from the end entity certs to widely-accepted trust anchors.</t>

<t>An S/MIME-capable MUA that has access to user certificates and their corresponding secret key material should also offer the ability to export those objects into a well-formed PKCS #12 object that could be imported into another MUA operated by the same user.</t>

<t>Manual handling of PKCS #12 objects is challenging for most users.
Producing the initial PKCS #12 object typically can only be done with the aid of a certification authority via non-standardized, labor-intensive, and error-prone procedures that most users do not understand.
Furthermore, manual export and import incurs ongoing labor (for example, before certificate expiration) by the user which most users are unprepared to do (see <xref target="local-cert-maintenance"/>).</t>

<t>A better approach is for the MUA to integrate some form of automated certificate issuance procedure, for example, by using the ACME protocol for end user S/MIME certificates (<xref target="RFC8823"/>).</t>

<t>See also <xref target="I-D.woodhouse-cert-best-practice"/> for more recommendations about managing user certificates.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="local-cert-pgp"><name>User Certificates for PGP/MIME</name>

<t>As distinct from S/MIME, OpenPGP (<xref target="RFC4880"/>) has a different set of common practices.
For one thing, a single OpenPGP certificate can contain both a signing-capable key and a distinct encryption-capable key, so only one certificate is needed for an e-mail user of OpenPGP, as long as the certificate has distinct key material for the different purposes.</t>

<t>Furthermore, a single OpenPGP certificate <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be only self-signed, so the MUA can generate such a certificate entirely on its own.</t>

<t>An OpenPGP-capable MUA should have the ability to import and export OpenPGP Tranferable Secret Keys (see <xref section="11.2" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC4880"/>), to enable manual transfer of user certificates and secret key material between multiple MUAs controlled by the user.</t>

<t>Since an OpenPGP certificate <bcp14>MAY</bcp14> be certified by third parties (whether formal certification authorities or merely other well-connected peers) the MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> offer affordances to help the user acquire and merge third party certifications on their certificate.
When doing this, the MUA should prioritize third-party certifications from entities that the user's peers are likely to know about and be willing to rely on.</t>

<t>Since an OpenPGP certificate can grow arbitrarily large with third-party certifications, the MUA should assist the user in pruning it to ensure that it remains a reasonable size when transmitting it to other parties.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="local-key-generation"><name>Generate Secret Key Material Locally</name>

<t>Regardless of protocol used (S/MIME or PGP), when producing certificates for the end user, the MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> ensure that it has generated secret key material locally, and <bcp14>MUST NOT</bcp14> accept secret key material from an untrusted external party as the basis for the user's certificate.</t>

<t>An MUA that accepts secret key material from a third party cannot prevent that third party from retaining this material.
A third party with this level of access could decrypt messages intended to be confidential for the user, or could forge messages that would appear to come from the user.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="local-cert-maintenance"><name>Local Certificate Maintenance</name>

<t>In the context of a single e-mail account managed by a MUA, where that e-mail account is expected to be able to use end-to-end cryptographic protections, the MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> warn the user (or proactively fix the problem) when/if:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The user's own certificate set for the account does not include a valid, unexpired encryption-capable X.509 certificate, and a valid, unexpired signature-capable X.509 certificate.</t>
  <t>Any of the user's own certificates for the account:
  <list style="symbols">
      <t>is due to expire in the next month (or at some other reasonable cadence).</t>
      <t>not match the e-mail address associated with the account in question.</t>
    </list></t>
  <t>Any of the user's own S/MIME certificates for the account:
  <list style="symbols">
      <t>does not have a keyUsage extension.</t>
      <t>does not contain an extendedKeyUsage extension.</t>
      <t>would be considered invalid by the MUA for any other reason if it were a peer certificate.</t>
    </list></t>
</list></t>

<t>An MUA that takes active steps to fix any of these problems before they arise is even more usable than just warning, but guidance on how to do active certificate maintenance is beyond scope for this current document (see <xref target="more-local-cert-maintenance"/>).</t>

<t>If the MUA does find any of these issues and chooses to warn the user, it should use one aggregate warning with simple language that the certificates might not be acceptable for other people, and recommend a course of action that the user can take to remedy the problem.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="sending-certificates"><name>Shipping Certificates in Outbound Messages</name>

<t>When sending mail, an MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> include copies of the user's own certificates (and potentially other certificates) in each message to facilitate future communication.</t>

<t>The mechanism for including these certificates, and which certificates to include in the message, are protocol specific.</t>

<section anchor="shipping-certificates-in-smime-messages"><name>Shipping Certificates in S/MIME Messages</name>

<t>In any S/MIME SignedData object, certificates can be shipped in the "certificates" member.
In S/MIME EnvelopedData object, certificates can be shipped in the "originatorInfo.certs" member.</t>

<t>When a single S/MIME-protected e-mail message is encrypted and signed, it is usually sufficient to ship all the relevant certificates in the inner SignedData object's "certificates" member.</t>

<t>The S/MIME certificates shipped in such a message <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> include:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The user's own S/MIME signing certificate, so that signature on the current message can be validated.</t>
  <t>The user's own S/MIME encryption-capable certificate, so that the recipient can reply in encrypted form.</t>
  <t>On an encrypted message to multiple recipients, the encryption-capable peer certificates of the other recipients, so that any recipient can easily "reply all" without needing to search for certificates.</t>
  <t>Any intermediate certificates needed to chain all of the above to a widely-trusted set of root authorities.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="shipping-certificates-in-pgpmime-messages"><name>Shipping Certificates in PGP/MIME Messages</name>

<t>PGP/MIME does not have a single specific standard location for shipping certificates.</t>

<t>Some MUAs ship relevant OpenPGP certificates in a single MIME leaf of Content-Type "application/pgp-keys".
When such a message has cryptographic protections, to ensure that the message is well-formed, this kind of MIME part <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be a leaf of the Cryptographic Payload, and not outside of it.
One problem with this approach is that it appears to recipients with legacy MUAs as an "attachment", which can lead to confusion if the user does not know how to use it.</t>

<t>Other implementations ship relevant OpenPGP certificates in "Autocrypt" or "Autocrypt-Gossip" message headers (see <xref target="AUTOCRYPT"/>).
To ensure that those headers receive the same cryptographic authenticity as the rest of the message, these headers <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> be protected as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-header-protection"/>.</t>

<t>The OpenPGP certificates shipped in such a message <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> include:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>The user's own OpenPGP certificate, capable of both signing and encryption, so that the user can validate the message's signature and can encrypt future messages</t>
  <t>On an encrypted message to multiple recipients, the OpenPGP certificates of the other recipients, so that any recipient can easily "reply all" without needing to search for certificates.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="common-pitfalls"><name>Common Pitfalls and Guidelines</name>

<t>This section highlights a few "pitfalls" and guidelines based on these discussions and lessons learned.</t>

<section anchor="reading-sent-messages"><name>Reading Sent Messages</name>

<t>When composing a message, a typical MUA will store a copy of the message sent in sender's Sent mail folder so that the sender can read it later.
If the message is an encrypted message, storing it encrypted requires some forethought to ensure that the sender can read it in the future.</t>

<t>It is a common and simple practice to encrypt the message not only to the recipients of the message, but also to the sender.
One advantage of doing this is that the message that is sent on the wire can be identical to the message stored in the sender's Sent mail folder.
This allows the sender to review and re-read the message even though it was encrypted.</t>

<t>There are at least three other approaches that are possible to ensure future readability by the sender of the message, but with different tradeoffs:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Encrypt two versions of the message: one to the recipients (this version is sent on the wire), and one to the sender only (this version is stored in the sender's Sent folder).
This approach means that the message stored in the Sent folder is not byte-for-byte identical to the message sent to the recipients.
In the event that message delivery has a transient failure, the MUA cannot simply re-submit the stored message into the SMTP system and expect it to be readable by the recipient.</t>
  <t>Store a cleartext version of the message in the Sent folder.
This presents a risk of information leakage: anyone with access to the Sent folder can read the contents of the message.
Furthermore, any attempt to re-send the message needs to also re-apply the cryptographic transformation before sending, or else the message contents will leak upon re-send.</t>
  <t>A final option is that the MUA can store a copy of the message's encryption session key.
Standard e-mail encryption mechanisms (e.g. S/MIME and PGP/MIME) are hybrid mechanisms: the asymmetric encryption steps simply encrypt a symmetric "session key", which is used to encrypt the message itself.
If the MUA stores the session key itself, it can use the session key to decrypt the Sent message without needing the Sent message to be decryptable by the user's own asymmetric key.
An MUA doing this must take care to store (and backup) its stash of session keys, because if it loses them it will not be able to read the sent messages; and if someone else gains access to them, they can decrypt the sent messages.
This has the additional consequence that any other MUA accessing the same Sent folder cannot decrypt the message unless it also has access to the stashed session key.</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="reading-encrypted-messages-after-certificate-expiration"><name>Reading Encrypted Messages after Certificate Expiration</name>

<t>When encrypting a message, the sending MUA should decline to encrypt to an expired certificate (see <xref target="peer-cert-selection"/>).
But when decrypting a message, as long as the viewing MUA has access to the appropriate secret key material, it should permit decryption of the message, even if the associated certificate is expired.
That is, the viewing MUA should not prevent the user from reading a message that they have already received.</t>

<t>The viewing MUA may warn the user when decrypting a message that appears to have been encrypted to an encryption-capable certificate that was expired at the time of encryption (e.g., based on the <spanx style="verb">Date:</spanx> header field of the message, or the timestamp in the cryptographic signature), but otherwise should not complain.</t>

<t>The primary goal of certificate expiration is to facilitate rotation of secret key material, so that secret key material does not need to be retained indefinitely.
Certificate expiration permits the user to destroy an older secret key if access to the messages received under it is no longer necessary (see also <xref target="secure-deletion"/>).</t>

</section>
<section anchor="message-headers"><name>Unprotected Message Headers</name>

<t>Many legacy cryptographically-aware MUAs only apply cryptographic protections to the body of the message, but leave the headers unprotected.
This gives rise to vulnerabilities like information leakage (e.g., the Subject line is visible to a passive intermediary) or message tampering (e.g., the Subject line is replaced, effectively changing the semantics of a signed message).
These are not only security vulnerabilities, but usability problems, because the distinction between what is a header and what is the body of a message is unclear to many end users, and requires a more complex mental model than is necessary.
Useful security comes from alignment between simple mental models and tooling.</t>

<t>To avoid these concerns, a MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> implement header protection as described in <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-header-protection"/>.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="bcc-variants"><name>Composing an Encrypted Message with Bcc</name>

<t>When composing an encrypted message containing at least one recipient address in the <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> header field, there is a risk that the encrypted message itself could leak information about the actual recipients, even if the <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> header field does not mention the recipient.
For example, if the message clearly indicates which certificates it is encrypted to, the set of certificates can identify the recipients even if they are not named in the message headers.</t>

<t>Because of these complexities, there are several interacting factors that need to be taken into account when composing an encrypted message with Bcc'ed recipients.</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t><xref section="3.6.3" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC5322"/> describes a set of choices about whether (and how) to populate the <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> field explicitly on Bcc'ed copies of the message, and in the copy stored in the sender's <spanx style="verb">Sent</spanx> folder.</t>
  <t>When separate copies are made for <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx>ed recipients, should each separate copy <em>also</em> be encrypted to the named recipients, or just to the designated <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> recipient?</t>
  <t>When a copy is stored in the <spanx style="verb">Sent</spanx> folder, should that copy also be encrypted to <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx>ed recipients? (see also <xref target="reading-sent-messages"/>)</t>
  <t>When a message is encrypted, if there is a mechanism to include the certificates of the recipients, whose certificates should be included?</t>
</list></t>

<section anchor="bcc-recommendation"><name>Simple Encryption with Bcc</name>

<t>Here is a simple approach that tries to minimize the total number of variants of the message created while leaving a coherent view of the message itself:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>No cryptographic payload contains any <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> header field.</t>
  <t>The main copy of the message is signed and encrypted to all named recipients and to the sender.
A copy of this message is also stored in the sender's <spanx style="verb">Sent</spanx> folder.</t>
  <t>Each <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx> recipient receives a distinct copy of the message, with an identical cryptographic payload, and the message is signed and encrypted to that specific recipient and all the named recipients.
These copies are not stored in the sender's <spanx style="verb">Sent</spanx> folder.</t>
  <t>To the extent that spare certificates are included in the message, each generated copy of the message should include certificates for the sender and for each named recipient.
Certificates for Bcc'ed recipients are not included in any message.</t>
</list></t>

<section anchor="rationale"><name>Rationale</name>

<t>The approach described in <xref target="bcc-recommendation"/>  aligns the list of cryptographic recipients as closely as possible with the set of named recipients, while still allowing a <spanx style="verb">Bcc</spanx>ed recipient to read their own copy, and to "Reply All" should they want to.</t>

<t>This should reduce user confusion on the receiving side: a recipient of such a message who naively looks at the user-facing headers from their own mailbox will have a good sense of what cryptographic treatments have been applied to the message.
It also simplifies message composition and user experience: the message composer sees fields that match their expectations about what will happen to the message.
Additionally, it may preserve the ability for a Bcc'ed recipient to retain their anonymity, should they need to offer the signed cryptographic payload to an outside party as proof of the original sender's intent without revealing their own identity.</t>

</section>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="draft-messages"><name>Draft Messages</name>

<t>When composing a message, most MUAs offer the opportunity to save a copy of the as-yet-unsent message to a "Drafts" folder.
If that folder is itself stored somewhere not under the user's control (e.g. and IMAP mailbox), it would be a mistake to store the draft message in the clear, because its contents could leak.</t>

<t>This is the case even if the message is ultimately sent deliberately in the clear.
During message composition, the MUA does not know whether the message is intended to be sent encrypted or not.
For example, just before sending, the sender could decide to encrypt the message, and the MUA would have had no way of knowing.</t>

<t>Furthermore, when encrypting a draft message, the message <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> only be encrypted to the user's own certificate, or to some equivalent secret key that only the user possesses.
A draft message encrypted in this way can be decrypted when the user wants to resume composing the message, but cannot be read by anyone else, including a potential intended recipient.
Note that a draft message encrypted in this way will only be resumable by another MUA attached to the same mailbox if that other MUA has access to the user's decryption-capable secret key.
This shared access to key material is also likely necessary for useful interoperability, but is beyond the scope of this document (see <xref target="cross-mua-local-keys"/>).</t>

<t>The message should only be encrypted to its recipients upon actually sending the message.
No reasonable user expects their message's intended recipients to be able to read a message that is not yet complete.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="mixed-recipients"><name>Composing a Message to Heterogeneous Recipients</name>

<t>When sending a message that the user intends to be encrypted, it's possible that some recipients will be unable to receive an encrypted copy.
For example, when Carol composes a message to Alice and Bob, Carol's MUA may be able to find a valid encryption-capable certificate for Alice, but none for Bob.</t>

<t>In this situation, there are four possible strategies, each of which has a negative impact on the experience of using encrypted mail.
Carol's MUA can:</t>

<t><list style="numbers">
  <t>send encrypted to Alice and Bob, knowing that Bob will be unable to read the message.</t>
  <t>send encrypted to Alice only, dropping Bob from the message recipient list.</t>
  <t>send the message in the clear to both Alice and Bob.</t>
  <t>send an encrypted copy of the message to Alice, and a cleartext copy to Bob.</t>
</list></t>

<t>Each of these strategies has different drawbacks.</t>

<t>The problem with approach 1 is that Bob will receive unreadable mail.</t>

<t>The problem with approach 2 is that Carol's MUA will not send the message to Bob, despite Carol asking it to.</t>

<t>The problem with approach 3 is that Carol's MUA will not encrypt the message, despite Carol asking it to.</t>

<t>Approach 4 has two problems:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Carol's MUA will release a cleartext copy of the message, despite Carol asking it to send the message encrypted.</t>
  <t>If Alice wants to "reply all" to the message, she may not be able to find an encryption-capable certificate for Bob either.
This puts Alice in an awkward and confusing position, one that users are unlikely to understand.
In particular, if Alice's MUA is following the guidance about replies to encrypted messages in <xref target="composing-reply"/>, having received an encrypted copy will make Alice's Reply buffer behave in an unusual fashion.</t>
</list></t>

<t>This is particularly problematic when the second recipient is not "Bob" but in fact a public mailing list or other visible archive, where messages are simply never encrypted.</t>

<t>Carol is unlikely to understand the subtleties and negative downstream interactions involved with approaches 1 and 4, so presenting the user with those choices is not advised.</t>

<t>The most understandable approach for a MUA with an active user is to ask the user (when they hit "send") to choose between approach 2 and approach 3.
If the user declines to choose between 2 and 3, the MUA can drop them back to their message composition window and let them make alternate adjustments.</t>

<t>See also further discussion of these scenarios in <xref target="I-D.dkg-mail-cleartext-copy"/>.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="message-transport-protocol-proxy-a-dangerous-implementation-choice"><name>Message Transport Protocol Proxy: A Dangerous Implementation Choice</name>

<t>An implementor of end-to-end cryptographic protections may be tempted by a simple software design that piggybacks off of a mail protocol like SMTP Submission (<xref target="RFC6409"/>), IMAP (<xref target="RFC3501"/>), or JMAP (<xref target="RFC8621"/>) to handle message assembly and interpretation.
In such an architecture, a naive MUA speaks something like a "standard" protocol like SMTP, IMAP, or JMAP to a local proxy, and the proxy handles signing and encryption (outbound), and decryption and verification (inbound) internally on behalf of the user.
While such a "pluggable" architecture has the advantage that it is likely to be easy to apply to any mail user agent, it is problematic for the goals of end-to-end communication, especially in an existing cleartext ecosystem like e-mail, where any given message might be unsigned or signed, cleartext or encrypted.
In particular:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>the user cannot easily and safely identify what protections any particular message has (including messages currently being composed), and</t>
  <t>the proxy itself is unaware of subtle nuances about the message that the MUA actually knows.</t>
</list></t>

<t>With a trustworthy and well-synchronized sidechannel or protocol extension between the MUA and the proxy, it is possible to deploy such an implementation safely, but the requirement for the sidechannel or extension eliminates the universal-deployability advantage of the scheme.</t>

<t>Similar concerns apply to any implementation bound by an API which operates on message objects alone, without any additional contextual parameters.</t>

<t>This section attempts to document some of the inherent risks involved with such an architecture.</t>

<section anchor="proxy-for-message-composition"><name>Dangers of a Submission Proxy for Message Composition</name>

<t>When composing and sending a message, the act of applying cryptographic protections has subtleties that cannot be directly expressed in the SMTP protocol used by Submission <xref target="RFC6409"/>, or in any other simple protocol that hands off a cleartext message for further processing.</t>

<t>For example, the sender cannot indicate via SMTP whether or not a given message <em>should</em> be encrypted (some messages, like those sent to a publicly archived mailing list, are pointless to encrypt), or select among multiple certificates for a recipient, if they exist (see <xref target="peer-cert-selection"/>).</t>

<t>Likewise, because such a proxy only interacts with the message when it is ready to be sent, it cannot indicate back to the user <em>during message composition</em> whether or not the message is able to be encrypted (that is, whether a valid certificate is available for each intended recipient).
A message author may write an entirely different message if they know that it will be protected end-to-end; but without this knowledge, the author is obliged either to write text that they presume will be intercepted, or to risk revealing sensitive content.</t>

<t>Even without encryption, deciding whether to sign or not (and which certificate to sign with, if more than one exists) is another choice that the proxy is ill-equipped to make.
The common message-signing techniques either render a message unreadable by any client that does not support cryptographic mail (i.e., PKCS7 signed-data), or appear as an attachment that can cause confusion to a naive recipient using a legacy client (i.e., multipart/signed).
If the sender knows that the recipient will not check signatures, they may prefer to leave a cleartext message without a cryptographic signature at all.</t>

<t>Furthermore, handling encryption properly depends on the context of any given message, which cannot be expressed by the MUA to the Submission proxy.
For example, decisions about how to handle encryption and quoted or attributed text may depend on the cryptographic status of the message that is being replied to (see <xref target="composing-reply"/>).</t>

<t>Additionally, such a proxy would need to be capable of managing the user's own key and certificate (see <xref target="local-certificates"/>).
How will the implementation indicate to the user when their own certificate is near expiry, for example?
How will any other error conditions be handled when communication with the user is needed?</t>

<t>While an extension to SMTP might be able to express all the necessary semantics that would allow a generic MUA to compose messages with standard cryptographic protections via a proxy, such an extension is beyond the scope of this document.
See <xref target="I-D.ietf-jmap-smime-sender-extensions"/> for an example of how a MUA using a proxy protocol might indicate signing and encryption instructions to its proxy.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="dangers-of-an-imap-proxy-for-message-rendering"><name>Dangers of an IMAP Proxy for Message Rendering</name>

<t>When receiving and rendering a message, the process of indicating to the user the cryptographic status of a message requires subtleties that are difficult to offer from a straightforwad IMAP (or POP <xref target="RFC1939"/>, or JMAP) proxy.</t>

<t>One approach such a proxy could take is to remove all the Cryptographic Layers from a well-formed message, and to package a description of those layers into a special header field that the MUA can read.
But this merely raises the question: what semantics need to be represented?
For example:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Was the message signed?  If so, by whom?  When?</t>
  <t>Should the details of the cryptographic algorithms used in any signatures found be indicated as well?</t>
  <t>Was the message encrypted?  if so, to whom?  What key was used to decrypt it?</t>
  <t>If both signed and encrypted, was the signing outside the encryption or inside?</t>
  <t>How should errant Cryptographic Layers (see <xref target="errant-cryptographic-layers"/>) be dealt with?</t>
  <t>What cryptographic protections do the headers of the message have? (see <xref target="I-D.ietf-lamps-header-protection"/>)</t>
  <t>How are any errors or surprises communicated to the user?</t>
</list></t>

<t>If the proxy passes any of this cryptographic status to the client in an added header field, it must also ensure that no such header field is present on the messages it receives before processing it.
If it were to allow such a header field through unmodified to any client that is willing to trust its contents, an attacker could spoof the field to make the user believe lies about the cryptographic status of the message.
In order for a MUA to be confident in such a header field, then, it needs a guarantee from the proxy that any header it produces will be safe.
How does the MUA reliably negogiate this guarantee with the proxy?
If the proxy can no longer offer this guarantee, how will the MUA know that things have changed?</t>

<t>If such a proxy handles certificate discovery in inbound messages (see <xref target="peer-discovery-incoming"/>), it will also need to communicate the results of that discovery process to its corresponding proxy for message composition (see <xref target="proxy-for-message-composition"/>).</t>

<t>While an extension to IMAP (or POP, or JMAP) might be able to express all the necessary semantics that would allow a generic MUA to indicate standardized cryptographic message status, such an extension is beyond the scope of this document.
<xref target="RFC9219"/> describes S/MIME signature verification status over JMAP, which is a subset of the cryptographic status information described here.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="who-controls-the-proxy"><name>Who Controls the Proxy?</name>

<t>Finally, consider that the naive proxy deployment approach is risky precisely because of its opacity to the end user.
Such a deployment could be placed anywhere in the stack, including on a machine that is not ultimately controlled by the end user, making it effectively a form of transport protection, rather than end-to-end protection.</t>

<t>A MUA explicitly under the control of the end user with thoughtful integration can offer UI/UX and security guarantees that a proxy cannot provide.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="intervening-mua"><name>Intervening MUAs Do Not Handle End-to-End Cryptographic Protections</name>

<t>Some Mail User Agents (MUAs) will resend a message in identical form (or very similar form) to the way that they received it.
For example, consider the following use cases:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>A mail expander or mailing list that receives a message and re-sends it to all subscribers.</t>
  <t>An individual user who "bounces" a message they received to a different e-mail address (see <xref section="3.6.6" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC5322"/>).</t>
  <t>An automated e-mail intake system that forwards a report to the mailboxes of responsible staffers.</t>
</list></t>

<t>These MUAs intervene in message transport by receiving and then re-injecting messages into the mail transport system.
In some cases, the original sender or final recipient of a message that has passed through such an MUA may be unaware of the intervention.
(Note that an MUA that forwards a received message as a attachment (MIME subpart) of type <spanx style="verb">message/rfc822</spanx> or <spanx style="verb">message/global</spanx> or "inline" in the body of a message is <em>not</em> acting as an intervening MUA in this sense, because the forwarded message is encapsulated within a visible outer message that is clearly from the MUA itself.)</t>

<t>An intervening MUA should be aware of end-to-end cryptographic protections that might already exist on messages that they re-send.
In particular, it is unclear what the "end-to-end" properties are of a message that has been handled by an intervening MUA.
For signed-only messages, if the intervening MUA makes any substantive modifications to the the message as it passes it along, it may break the signature from the original sender.
In many cases, breaking the original signature is the appropriate result, since the original message has been modified, and the original sender has no control over the modifications made by the intervening MUA.
For encrypted-and-signed messages, if the intervening MUA is capable of decrypting the message, it must be careful when re-transmitting the message.
Will the new recipient be able to decrypt it?
If not, will the message be useful to the recipient?
If not, it may not make sense to re-send the message.</t>

<t>Beyond the act of re-sending, an intervening MUA should not itself try to apply end-to-end cryptographic protections on a message that it is resending unless directed otherwise by some future specification.
Additional layers of cryptographic protection added in an ad-hoc way by an intervening MUA are more likely to confuse the recipient and will not be interpretable as end-to-end protections as they do not originate with the original sender of the message.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="external-subresources"><name>External Subresources in MIME Parts Break Cryptographic Protections</name>

<t>A MIME part with a content type that can refer to external resources (like <spanx style="verb">text/html</spanx>) may itself have some sort of end-to-end cryptographic protections.
However, retrieving or rendering these external resources may violate the properties that users expect from cryptographic protection.</t>

<t>For example, an signed e-mail message with at <spanx style="verb">text/html</spanx> part that refers to an external image (i.e. via <spanx style="verb">&lt;img src="https://example.com/img.png"&gt;</spanx>) may render differently if the hosting webserver decides to serve different content at the source URL for the image.
This effectively breaks the goals of integrity and authenticity that the user should be able to rely on for signed messages, unless the external subresource has strict integrity guarantees (e.g. via <xref target="SRI"/>).</t>

<t>Likewise, fetching an external subresource for an encrypted-and-signed message effectively breaks goals of privacy and confidentiality for the user.</t>

<t>This is loosely analogous to security indicator problems that arose for web browsers as described in <xref target="mixed-content"/>.
However, while fetching the external subresource over https is sufficient to avoid a "mixed content" warning from most browsers, it is insufficicent for a MUA that wants to offer its users true end-to-end guarantees for e-mail messages.</t>

<t>A sending MUA that applies signing-only cryptographic protection to a new e-mail message with an external subresource should take one of the following options:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>pre-fetch the external subresource and include it in the message itself,</t>
  <t>use a strong integrity mechanism like Subresource Integrity (<xref target="SRI"/>) to guarantee the content of the subresource, or</t>
  <t>prompt the composing user to remove the subresource from the message.</t>
</list></t>

<t>A sending MUA that applies encryption to a new e-mail message with an external resource cannot depend on subresource integrity to protect the privacy and confidentiality of the message, so it should either pre-fetch the external resource to include it in the message, or prompt the composing user to remove it before sending.</t>

<t>A receiving MUA that encounters a message with end-to-end cryptographic protections that contain a subresource should either refuse to retrieve and render the external subresource, or it should decline to treat the message as having cryptographic protections.
For example, it could decline to indicate that the message is signed, or it could treat the message as not properly encrypted.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="iana-considerations"><name>IANA Considerations</name>

<t>This document does not require anything from IANA.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="security-considerations"><name>Security Considerations</name>

<t>This entire document addresses security considerations about end-to-end cryptographic protections for e-mail messages.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="acknowledgements"><name>Acknowledgements</name>

<t>The set of constructs and recommendations in this document are derived from discussions with many different implementers, including
Bjarni Rúnar Einarsson,
David Bremner,
Deb Cooley,
Eliot Lear,
Holger Krekel,
Jameson Rollins,
John Levine,
Jonathan Hammell,
juga,
Patrick Brunschwig,
Santosh Chokhani,
Stephen Farrell, and
Vincent Breitmoser.</t>

</section>


  </middle>

  <back>


    <references title='Normative References'>



<reference anchor='RFC8551'>
  <front>
    <title>Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 4.0 Message Specification</title>
    <author fullname='J. Schaad' initials='J.' surname='Schaad'/>
    <author fullname='B. Ramsdell' initials='B.' surname='Ramsdell'/>
    <author fullname='S. Turner' initials='S.' surname='Turner'/>
    <date month='April' year='2019'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document defines Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S/MIME) version 4.0. S/MIME provides a consistent way to send and receive secure MIME data. Digital signatures provide authentication, message integrity, and non-repudiation with proof of origin. Encryption provides data confidentiality. Compression can be used to reduce data size. This document obsoletes RFC 5751.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8551'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8551'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC3156'>
  <front>
    <title>MIME Security with OpenPGP</title>
    <author fullname='M. Elkins' initials='M.' surname='Elkins'/>
    <author fullname='D. Del Torto' initials='D.' surname='Del Torto'/>
    <author fullname='R. Levien' initials='R.' surname='Levien'/>
    <author fullname='T. Roessler' initials='T.' surname='Roessler'/>
    <date month='August' year='2001'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document describes how the OpenPGP Message Format can be used to provide privacy and authentication using the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) security content types described in RFC 1847. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='3156'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC3156'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC4289'>
  <front>
    <title>Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Four: Registration Procedures</title>
    <author fullname='N. Freed' initials='N.' surname='Freed'/>
    <author fullname='J. Klensin' initials='J.' surname='Klensin'/>
    <date month='December' year='2005'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document specifies IANA registration procedures for MIME external body access types and content-transfer-encodings. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='BCP' value='13'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='4289'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC4289'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC2119'>
  <front>
    <title>Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
    <author fullname='S. Bradner' initials='S.' surname='Bradner'/>
    <date month='March' year='1997'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>In many standards track documents several words are used to signify the requirements in the specification. These words are often capitalized. This document defines these words as they should be interpreted in IETF documents. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='BCP' value='14'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='2119'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC2119'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC8174'>
  <front>
    <title>Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words</title>
    <author fullname='B. Leiba' initials='B.' surname='Leiba'/>
    <date month='May' year='2017'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>RFC 2119 specifies common key words that may be used in protocol specifications. This document aims to reduce the ambiguity by clarifying that only UPPERCASE usage of the key words have the defined special meanings.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='BCP' value='14'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8174'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8174'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC5890'>
  <front>
    <title>Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework</title>
    <author fullname='J. Klensin' initials='J.' surname='Klensin'/>
    <date month='August' year='2010'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document is one of a collection that, together, describe the protocol and usage context for a revision of Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA), superseding the earlier version. It describes the document collection and provides definitions and other material that are common to the set. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='5890'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC5890'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-lamps-header-protection'>
   <front>
      <title>Header Protection for Cryptographically Protected E-mail</title>
      <author fullname='Daniel Kahn Gillmor' initials='D. K.' surname='Gillmor'>
         <organization>American Civil Liberties Union</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Bernie Hoeneisen' initials='B.' surname='Hoeneisen'>
         <organization>pEp Foundation</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Alexey Melnikov' initials='A.' surname='Melnikov'>
         <organization>Isode Ltd</organization>
      </author>
      <date day='26' month='April' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   S/MIME version 3.1 introduced a mechanism to provide end-to-end
   cryptographic protection of e-mail message headers.  However, few
   implementations generate messages using this mechanism, and several
   legacy implementations have revealed rendering or security issues
   when handling such a message.

   This document updates the S/MIME specification to offer a different
   mechanism that provides the same cryptographic protections but with
   fewer downsides when handled by legacy clients.  The header
   protection schemes described here are also applicable to messages
   with PGP/MIME cryptographic protections.  Furthermore, this document
   offers more explicit guidance for clients when generating or handling
   e-mail messages with cryptographic protection of message headers.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-lamps-header-protection-15'/>
   
</reference>




    </references>

    <references title='Informative References'>

<reference anchor="AUTOCRYPT" target="https://autocrypt.org/">
  <front>
    <title>Autocrypt - Convenient End-to-End Encryption for E-Mail</title>
    <author initials="V." surname="Breitmoser" fullname="Vincent Breitmoser">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="H." surname="Krekel" fullname="Holger Krekel">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="D. K." surname="Gillmor" fullname="Daniel Kahn Gillmor">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="chrome-indicators" target="https://blog.chromium.org/2018/05/evolving-chromes-security-indicators.html">
  <front>
    <title>Evolving Chrome's security indicators</title>
    <author initials="E." surname="Schechter" fullname="Emily Schechter">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="2018" month="May"/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="EFAIL" target="https://efail.de">
  <front>
    <title>Efail: breaking S/MIME and OpenPGP email encryption using exfiltration channels</title>
    <author initials="D." surname="Poddebniak" fullname="Damian Poddebniak">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="C." surname="Dresen" fullname="Christian Dresen">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Müller" fullname="Jens Müller">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="F." surname="Ising" fullname="Fabian Ising">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Schinzel" fullname="Sebastian Schinzel">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Friedberger" fullname="Simon Friedberger">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Somorovsky" fullname="Juraj Somorovsky">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Schwenk" fullname="Jörg Schwenk">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="mixed-content" target="https://www.w3.org/TR/mixed-content/">
  <front>
    <title>Mixed Content</title>
    <author >
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="ORACLE" target="https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ising">
  <front>
    <title>Content-Type: multipart/oracle Tapping into Format Oracles in Email End-to-End Encryption</title>
    <author initials="F." surname="Ising" fullname="Fabian Ising">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="D." surname="Poddebniak" fullname="Damian Poddebniak">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="T." surname="Kappert" fullname="Tobias Kappert">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="C." surname="Saatjohann" fullname="Christoph Saatjohann">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Schinzel" fullname="Sebastian Schinzel">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="SRI" target="https://www.w3.org/TR/SRI/">
  <front>
    <title>Subresource Integrity</title>
    <author >
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="DROWN" target="https://drownattack.com/">
  <front>
    <title>DROWN: Breaking TLS using SSLv2</title>
    <author initials="N." surname="Aviram" fullname="Nimrod Aviram">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Schinzel" fullname="Sebastian Schinzel">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Somorovsky" fullname="Juraj Somorovsky">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="N." surname="Heninger" fullname="Nadia Heninger">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Dankel" fullname="Maik Dankel">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Steube" fullname="Jens Steube">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="L." surname="Valenta" fullname="Luke Valenta">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="D." surname="Adrian" fullname="David Adrian">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J. A." surname="Halderman" fullname="J. Alex Halderman">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="V." surname="Dukhovni" fullname="Viktor Dukhovni">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="E." surname="Käsper" fullname="Emilia Käsper">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Cohney" fullname="Shaanan Cohney">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="S." surname="Engels" fullname="Susanne Engels">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="C." surname="Paar" fullname="Christof Paar">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="Y." surname="Shavitt" fullname="Yuval Shavitt">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="IKE" target="https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/usenixsecurity18/sec18-felsch.pdf">
  <front>
    <title>The Dangers of Key Reuse: Practical Attacks on IPsec IKE</title>
    <author initials="D." surname="Felsch" fullname="Dennis Felsch">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Grothe" fullname="Martin Grothe">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="J." surname="Schwenk" fullname="Jörg Schwenk">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="A." surname="Czubak" fullname="Adam Czubak">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <author initials="M." surname="Szymane" fullname="Marcin Szymane">
      <organization></organization>
    </author>
    <date year="n.d."/>
  </front>
</reference>


<reference anchor='RFC2045'>
  <front>
    <title>Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies</title>
    <author fullname='N. Freed' initials='N.' surname='Freed'/>
    <author fullname='N. Borenstein' initials='N.' surname='Borenstein'/>
    <date month='November' year='1996'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This initial document specifies the various headers used to describe the structure of MIME messages. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='2045'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC2045'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC3207'>
  <front>
    <title>SMTP Service Extension for Secure SMTP over Transport Layer Security</title>
    <author fullname='P. Hoffman' initials='P.' surname='Hoffman'/>
    <date month='February' year='2002'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document describes an extension to the SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) service that allows an SMTP server and client to use TLS (Transport Layer Security) to provide private, authenticated communication over the Internet. This gives SMTP agents the ability to protect some or all of their communications from eavesdroppers and attackers. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='3207'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC3207'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC6376'>
  <front>
    <title>DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) Signatures</title>
    <author fullname='D. Crocker' initials='D.' role='editor' surname='Crocker'/>
    <author fullname='T. Hansen' initials='T.' role='editor' surname='Hansen'/>
    <author fullname='M. Kucherawy' initials='M.' role='editor' surname='Kucherawy'/>
    <date month='September' year='2011'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) permits a person, role, or organization that owns the signing domain to claim some responsibility for a message by associating the domain with the message. This can be an author's organization, an operational relay, or one of their agents. DKIM separates the question of the identity of the Signer of the message from the purported author of the message. Assertion of responsibility is validated through a cryptographic signature and by querying the Signer's domain directly to retrieve the appropriate public key. Message transit from author to recipient is through relays that typically make no substantive change to the message content and thus preserve the DKIM signature.</t>
      <t>This memo obsoletes RFC 4871 and RFC 5672. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='STD' value='76'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='6376'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC6376'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC7435'>
  <front>
    <title>Opportunistic Security: Some Protection Most of the Time</title>
    <author fullname='V. Dukhovni' initials='V.' surname='Dukhovni'/>
    <date month='December' year='2014'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document defines the concept "Opportunistic Security" in the context of communications protocols. Protocol designs based on Opportunistic Security use encryption even when authentication is not available, and use authentication when possible, thereby removing barriers to the widespread use of encryption on the Internet.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='7435'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC7435'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC3274'>
  <front>
    <title>Compressed Data Content Type for Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS)</title>
    <author fullname='P. Gutmann' initials='P.' surname='Gutmann'/>
    <date month='June' year='2002'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document defines a format for using compressed data as a Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS) content type. Compressing data before transmission provides a number of advantages, including the elimination of data redundancy which could help an attacker, speeding up processing by reducing the amount of data to be processed by later steps (such as signing or encryption), and reducing overall message size. Although there have been proposals for adding compression at other levels (for example at the MIME or SSL level), these don't address the problem of compression of CMS content unless the compression is supplied by an external means (for example by intermixing MIME and CMS). [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='3274'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC3274'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC4880'>
  <front>
    <title>OpenPGP Message Format</title>
    <author fullname='J. Callas' initials='J.' surname='Callas'/>
    <author fullname='L. Donnerhacke' initials='L.' surname='Donnerhacke'/>
    <author fullname='H. Finney' initials='H.' surname='Finney'/>
    <author fullname='D. Shaw' initials='D.' surname='Shaw'/>
    <author fullname='R. Thayer' initials='R.' surname='Thayer'/>
    <date month='November' year='2007'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document is maintained in order to publish all necessary information needed to develop interoperable applications based on the OpenPGP format. It is not a step-by-step cookbook for writing an application. It describes only the format and methods needed to read, check, generate, and write conforming packets crossing any network. It does not deal with storage and implementation questions. It does, however, discuss implementation issues necessary to avoid security flaws.</t>
      <t>OpenPGP software uses a combination of strong public-key and symmetric cryptography to provide security services for electronic communications and data storage. These services include confidentiality, key management, authentication, and digital signatures. This document specifies the message formats used in OpenPGP. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='4880'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC4880'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC5322'>
  <front>
    <title>Internet Message Format</title>
    <author fullname='P. Resnick' initials='P.' role='editor' surname='Resnick'/>
    <date month='October' year='2008'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document specifies the Internet Message Format (IMF), a syntax for text messages that are sent between computer users, within the framework of "electronic mail" messages. This specification is a revision of Request For Comments (RFC) 2822, which itself superseded Request For Comments (RFC) 822, "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages", updating it to reflect current practice and incorporating incremental changes that were specified in other RFCs. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='5322'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC5322'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC5355'>
  <front>
    <title>Threats Introduced by Reliable Server Pooling (RSerPool) and Requirements for Security in Response to Threats</title>
    <author fullname='M. Stillman' initials='M.' role='editor' surname='Stillman'/>
    <author fullname='R. Gopal' initials='R.' surname='Gopal'/>
    <author fullname='E. Guttman' initials='E.' surname='Guttman'/>
    <author fullname='S. Sengodan' initials='S.' surname='Sengodan'/>
    <author fullname='M. Holdrege' initials='M.' surname='Holdrege'/>
    <date month='September' year='2008'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>Reliable Server Pooling (RSerPool) is an architecture and set of protocols for the management and access to server pools supporting highly reliable applications and for client access mechanisms to a server pool. This document describes security threats to the RSerPool architecture and presents requirements for security to thwart these threats. This memo provides information for the Internet community.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='5355'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC5355'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC7292'>
  <front>
    <title>PKCS #12: Personal Information Exchange Syntax v1.1</title>
    <author fullname='K. Moriarty' initials='K.' role='editor' surname='Moriarty'/>
    <author fullname='M. Nystrom' initials='M.' surname='Nystrom'/>
    <author fullname='S. Parkinson' initials='S.' surname='Parkinson'/>
    <author fullname='A. Rusch' initials='A.' surname='Rusch'/>
    <author fullname='M. Scott' initials='M.' surname='Scott'/>
    <date month='July' year='2014'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>PKCS #12 v1.1 describes a transfer syntax for personal identity information, including private keys, certificates, miscellaneous secrets, and extensions. Machines, applications, browsers, Internet kiosks, and so on, that support this standard will allow a user to import, export, and exercise a single set of personal identity information. This standard supports direct transfer of personal information under several privacy and integrity modes.</t>
      <t>This document represents a republication of PKCS #12 v1.1 from RSA Laboratories' Public Key Cryptography Standard (PKCS) series. By publishing this RFC, change control is transferred to the IETF.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='7292'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC7292'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC8823'>
  <front>
    <title>Extensions to Automatic Certificate Management Environment for End-User S/MIME Certificates</title>
    <author fullname='A. Melnikov' initials='A.' surname='Melnikov'/>
    <date month='April' year='2021'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document specifies identifiers and challenges required to enable the Automated Certificate Management Environment (ACME) to issue certificates for use by email users that want to use S/MIME.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8823'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8823'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.woodhouse-cert-best-practice'>
   <front>
      <title>Recommendations for applications using X.509 client certificates</title>
      <author fullname='David Woodhouse' initials='D.' surname='Woodhouse'>
         <organization>Amazon Web Services</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Nikos Mavrogiannopoulos' initials='N.' surname='Mavrogiannopoulos'>
         <organization>Red Hat, Inc.</organization>
      </author>
      <date day='20' month='June' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   X.509 certificates are widely used for client authentication in many
   protocols, especially in conjunction with Transport Layer Security
   ([RFC5246]) and Datagram Transport Layer Security ([RFC6347].  There
   exist a multitude of forms in which certificates and especially their
   corresponding private keys may be stored or referenced.

   Applications have historically been massively inconsistent in which
   subset of these forms have been supported, and what knowledge is
   demanded of the user.  This memo sets out best practice for
   applications in the interest of usability and consistency.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-woodhouse-cert-best-practice-00'/>
   
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.dkg-mail-cleartext-copy'>
   <front>
      <title>Encrypted E-mail with Cleartext Copies</title>
      <author fullname='Daniel Kahn Gillmor' initials='D. K.' surname='Gillmor'>
         </author>
      <date day='21' month='February' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   When an e-mail program generates an encrypted message to multiple
   recipients, it is possible that it has no encryption capability for
   at least one of the recipients.

   In this circumstance, an e-mail program may choose to send the
   message in cleartext to the recipient it cannot encrypt to.

   This draft currently offers several possible approaches when such a
   choice is made by the sender, so that the recipient can reason about
   and act on the cryptographic status of the message responsibly.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-dkg-mail-cleartext-copy-01'/>
   
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC6409'>
  <front>
    <title>Message Submission for Mail</title>
    <author fullname='R. Gellens' initials='R.' surname='Gellens'/>
    <author fullname='J. Klensin' initials='J.' surname='Klensin'/>
    <date month='November' year='2011'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This memo splits message submission from message relay, allowing each service to operate according to its own rules (for security, policy, etc.), and specifies what actions are to be taken by a submission server.</t>
      <t>Message relay is unaffected, and continues to use SMTP over port 25.</t>
      <t>When conforming to this document, message submission uses the protocol specified here, normally over port 587.</t>
      <t>This separation of function offers a number of benefits, including the ability to apply specific security or policy requirements. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='STD' value='72'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='6409'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC6409'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC3501'>
  <front>
    <title>INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL - VERSION 4rev1</title>
    <author fullname='M. Crispin' initials='M.' surname='Crispin'/>
    <date month='March' year='2003'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>The Internet Message Access Protocol, Version 4rev1 (IMAP4rev1) allows a client to access and manipulate electronic mail messages on a server. IMAP4rev1 permits manipulation of mailboxes (remote message folders) in a way that is functionally equivalent to local folders. IMAP4rev1 also provides the capability for an offline client to resynchronize with the server. IMAP4rev1 includes operations for creating, deleting, and renaming mailboxes, checking for new messages, permanently removing messages, setting and clearing flags, RFC 2822 and RFC 2045 parsing, searching, and selective fetching of message attributes, texts, and portions thereof. Messages in IMAP4rev1 are accessed by the use of numbers. These numbers are either message sequence numbers or unique identifiers. IMAP4rev1 supports a single server. A mechanism for accessing configuration information to support multiple IMAP4rev1 servers is discussed in RFC 2244. IMAP4rev1 does not specify a means of posting mail; this function is handled by a mail transfer protocol such as RFC 2821. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='3501'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC3501'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC8621'>
  <front>
    <title>The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP) for Mail</title>
    <author fullname='N. Jenkins' initials='N.' surname='Jenkins'/>
    <author fullname='C. Newman' initials='C.' surname='Newman'/>
    <date month='August' year='2019'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document specifies a data model for synchronising email data with a server using the JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP). Clients can use this to efficiently search, access, organise, and send messages, and to get push notifications for fast resynchronisation when new messages are delivered or a change is made in another client.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8621'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8621'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-jmap-smime-sender-extensions'>
   <front>
      <title>JMAP extension for S/MIME signing and encryption</title>
      <author fullname='Alexey Melnikov' initials='A.' surname='Melnikov'>
         <organization>Isode Ltd</organization>
      </author>
      <date day='13' month='March' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   This document specifies an extension to JMAP for sending S/MIME
   signed and S/MIME encrypted messages.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-jmap-smime-sender-extensions-03'/>
   
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC1939'>
  <front>
    <title>Post Office Protocol - Version 3</title>
    <author fullname='J. Myers' initials='J.' surname='Myers'/>
    <author fullname='M. Rose' initials='M.' surname='Rose'/>
    <date month='May' year='1996'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>The Post Office Protocol - Version 3 (POP3) is intended to permit a workstation to dynamically access a maildrop on a server host in a useful fashion. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='STD' value='53'/>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='1939'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC1939'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC9219'>
  <front>
    <title>S/MIME Signature Verification Extension to the JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP)</title>
    <author fullname='A. Melnikov' initials='A.' surname='Melnikov'/>
    <date month='April' year='2022'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document specifies an extension to "The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP) for Mail" (RFC 8621) for returning the S/MIME signature verification status.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='9219'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC9219'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.ietf-openpgp-crypto-refresh'>
   <front>
      <title>OpenPGP</title>
      <author fullname='Paul Wouters' initials='P.' surname='Wouters'>
         <organization>Aiven</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Daniel Huigens' initials='D.' surname='Huigens'>
         <organization>Proton AG</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Justus Winter' initials='J.' surname='Winter'>
         <organization>Sequoia-PGP</organization>
      </author>
      <author fullname='Niibe Yutaka' initials='N.' surname='Yutaka'>
         <organization>FSIJ</organization>
      </author>
      <date day='21' month='June' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   This document specifies the message formats used in OpenPGP.  OpenPGP
   provides encryption with public-key or symmetric cryptographic
   algorithms, digital signatures, compression and key management.

   This document is maintained in order to publish all necessary
   information needed to develop interoperable applications based on the
   OpenPGP format.  It is not a step-by-step cookbook for writing an
   application.  It describes only the format and methods needed to
   read, check, generate, and write conforming packets crossing any
   network.  It does not deal with storage and implementation questions.
   It does, however, discuss implementation issues necessary to avoid
   security flaws.

   This document obsoletes: RFC 4880 (OpenPGP), RFC 5581 (Camellia in
   OpenPGP) and RFC 6637 (Elliptic Curves in OpenPGP).

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-ietf-openpgp-crypto-refresh-10'/>
   
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC9216'>
  <front>
    <title>S/MIME Example Keys and Certificates</title>
    <author fullname='D. K. Gillmor' initials='D. K.' role='editor' surname='Gillmor'/>
    <date month='April' year='2022'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>The S/MIME development community benefits from sharing samples of signed or encrypted data. This document facilitates such collaboration by defining a small set of X.509v3 certificates and keys for use when generating such samples.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='9216'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC9216'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC4511'>
  <front>
    <title>Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP): The Protocol</title>
    <author fullname='J. Sermersheim' initials='J.' role='editor' surname='Sermersheim'/>
    <date month='June' year='2006'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document describes the protocol elements, along with their semantics and encodings, of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP). LDAP provides access to distributed directory services that act in accordance with X.500 data and service models. These protocol elements are based on those described in the X.500 Directory Access Protocol (DAP). [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='4511'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC4511'/>
</reference>


<reference anchor='I-D.koch-openpgp-webkey-service'>
   <front>
      <title>OpenPGP Web Key Directory</title>
      <author fullname='Werner Koch' initials='W.' surname='Koch'>
         <organization>GnuPG e.V.</organization>
      </author>
      <date day='22' month='May' year='2023'/>
      <abstract>
	 <t>   This specification describes a service to locate OpenPGP keys by mail
   address using a Web service and the HTTPS protocol.  It also provides
   a method for secure communication between the key owner and the mail
   provider to publish and revoke the public key.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name='Internet-Draft' value='draft-koch-openpgp-webkey-service-16'/>
   
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC8162'>
  <front>
    <title>Using Secure DNS to Associate Certificates with Domain Names for S/MIME</title>
    <author fullname='P. Hoffman' initials='P.' surname='Hoffman'/>
    <author fullname='J. Schlyter' initials='J.' surname='Schlyter'/>
    <date month='May' year='2017'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>This document describes how to use secure DNS to associate an S/MIME user's certificate with the intended domain name, similar to the way that DNS-Based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE), RFC 6698, does for TLS.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='8162'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC8162'/>
</reference>

<reference anchor='RFC7929'>
  <front>
    <title>DNS-Based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) Bindings for OpenPGP</title>
    <author fullname='P. Wouters' initials='P.' surname='Wouters'/>
    <date month='August' year='2016'/>
    <abstract>
      <t>OpenPGP is a message format for email (and file) encryption that lacks a standardized lookup mechanism to securely obtain OpenPGP public keys. DNS-Based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) is a method for publishing public keys in DNS. This document specifies a DANE method for publishing and locating OpenPGP public keys in DNS for a specific email address using a new OPENPGPKEY DNS resource record. Security is provided via Secure DNS, however the OPENPGPKEY record is not a replacement for verification of authenticity via the "web of trust" or manual verification. The OPENPGPKEY record can be used to encrypt an email that would otherwise have to be sent unencrypted.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>
  <seriesInfo name='RFC' value='7929'/>
  <seriesInfo name='DOI' value='10.17487/RFC7929'/>
</reference>




    </references>


<section anchor="future-work"><name>Future Work</name>

<t>This document contains useful guidance for MUA implementers, but it cannot contain all possible guidance.
Future revisions to this document may want to further explore the following topics, which are out of scope for this version.</t>

<section anchor="test-vectors"><name>Test Vectors</name>

<t>A future version of this document (or a companion document) could contain examples of well-formed and malformed messages using cryptographic key material and certificates from <xref target="I-D.ietf-openpgp-crypto-refresh"/> and <xref target="RFC9216"/>.</t>

<t>It may also include example renderings of these messages.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="more-peer-certs"><name>Further Guidance on Peer Certificates</name>

<section anchor="peer-discovery-incoming"><name>Certificate Discovery from Incoming Messages</name>

<t>As described in <xref target="sending-certificates"/>, an incoming e-mail message may have one or more certificates embedded in it.
This document currently acknowledges that receiving MUA should assemble a cache of certificates for future use, but providing more detailed guidance for how to assemble and manage that cache is currently out of scope.</t>

<t>Existing recommendations like <xref target="AUTOCRYPT"/> provide some guidance for handling incoming certificates about peers, but only in certain contexts.
A future version of this document may describe in more detail how these incoming certs should be handled.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="peer-discovery--directory"><name>Certificate Directories</name>

<t>Some MUAs may have the capability to look up peer certificates in a directory, for example via LDAP <xref target="RFC4511"/>, WKD <xref target="I-D.koch-openpgp-webkey-service"/>, or the DNS (e.g. SMIMEA <xref target="RFC8162"/> or OPENPGPKEY <xref target="RFC7929"/> resource records).</t>

<t>A future version of this document may describe in more detail what sources a MUA should consider when searching for a peer's certificates, and what to do with the certificates found by various methods.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="cert-revocation"><name>Checking for Certificate Revocation</name>

<t>A future version of this document could discuss how/when to check for revocation of peer certificates, or of the user's own certificate.</t>

<t>Such discussion should address privacy concerns: what information leaks to whom when checking peer cert revocations?</t>

</section>
<section anchor="more-peer-cert-selection"><name>Further Peer Certificate Selection</name>

<t>A future version of this document may describe more prescriptions for deciding whether a peer certificate is acceptable for encrypting a message.
For example, if the SPKI is an EC Public Key and the keyUsage extension is absent, what should the encrypting MUA do?</t>

<t>A future version of this document might also provide guidance on what to do if multiple certificates are all acceptable for encrypting to a given recipient.
For example, the sender could select among them in some deterministic way; it could encrypt to all of them; or it could present them to the user to let the user select any or all of them.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="more-local-certs"><name>Further Guidance on Local Certificates and Secret Keys</name>

<section anchor="cross-mua-local-keys"><name>Cross-MUA sharing of Local Certificates and Secret Keys</name>

<t>Many users today use more than one MUA to access the same mailbox (for example, one MUA on a mobile device, and another MUA on a desktop computer).</t>

<t>A future version of this document might offer guidance on how multiple MUAs attached to the same mailbox can efficiently and securely share the user's own secret key material and certificates between each other.
This guidance should include suggestions on how to maintain the user's keys (e.g. avoiding certificate expiration) and safe secret key transmission.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="smartcards"><name>Use of Smartcards or Other Portable Secret Key Mechanisms</name>

<t>Rather than having to transfer secret key material between clients, some users may prefer to rely on portable hardware-backed secret keys in the form of smartcards, USB tokens or other comparable form factors.
These secret keys sometimes require direct user interaction for each use, which can complicate the usability of any MUA that uses them to decrypt a large number of messages.</t>

<t>Guidance on the use of this kind of secret key management are beyond the scope of this document, but future revisions may bring them into scope.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="more-local-cert-maintenance"><name>Active Local Certificate Maintenance</name>

<t><xref target="local-cert-maintenance"/> describes conditions where the MUA <bcp14>SHOULD</bcp14> warn the user that something is going wrong with their certificate.</t>

<t>A future version of this document might outline how a MUA could actively avoid these warning situations, for example, by automatically updating the certificate or prompting the user to take specific action.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="cert-authorities"><name>Certification Authorities</name>

<t>A future document could offer guidance on how an MUA should select and manage root certification authorities (CAs).</t>

<t>For example:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Should the MUA cache intermediate CAs?</t>
  <t>Should the MUA share such a cache with other PKI clients (e.g., web browsers)?</t>
  <t>What distinctions are there between a CA for S/MIME and a CA for the web?</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="indexing-and-search"><name>Indexing and Search of Encrypted Messages</name>

<t>A common use case for MUAs is search of existing messages by keyword or topic.
This is done most efficiently for large mailboxes by assembling an index of message content, rather than by a linear scan of all message content.</t>

<t>When message contents and headers are encrypted, search by index is complicated.
If the cleartext is not indexed, then messages cannot be found by search.
On the other hand, if the cleartext is indexed, then the index effectively contains the sensitive contents of the message, and needs to be protected.</t>

<t>Detailed guidance on the tradeoff here, including choices about remote search vs local search, are beyond the scope of this document, but a future version of the document may bring them into scope.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="cached-sigs"><name>Cached Signature Validation</name>

<t>Asymmetric signature validation can be computationally expensive, and the results can also potentially vary over time (e.g. if a signing certificate is discovered to be revoked).
In some cases, the user may care about the signature validation that they saw when they first read or received the message, not only about the status of the signature verification at the current time.</t>

<t>So, for both performance reasons and historical perspective, it may be useful for an MUA to cache signature validation results in a way that they can be easily retrieved and compared.
Documenting how and when to cache signature validation, as well as how to indicate it to the user, is beyond the scope of this document, but a future version of the document may bring these topics into scope.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="aggregate-cryptographic-status"><name>Aggregate Cryptographic Status</name>

<t>This document limits itself to consideration of the cryptographic status of single messages as a baseline concept that can be clearly and simply communicated to the user.
However, some users and some MUAs may find it useful to contemplate even higher-level views of cryptographic status which are not considered directly here.</t>

<t>For example, a future version of the document may also consider how to indicate a simple cryptographic status of message threads (groups of explicitly related messages), conversations (groups of messages with shared sets of participants), peers, or other perspectives that a MUA can provide.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="expect-e2e"><name>Expectations of Cryptographic Protection</name>

<t>As mentioned in <xref target="security-indicators"/>, the types of security indicators displayed to the user may well vary based on the expectations of the user for a given communication.
At present, there is no widely shared method for the MUA to establish and maintain reasonable expectations about whether a specific received message should have cryptographic protections.</t>

<t>If such a standard is developed, a future version of this document should reference it and encourage the deployment of clearer and simpler security indicators.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="secure-deletion"><name>Secure Deletion</name>

<t>One feature many users desire from a secure communications medium is the ability to reliably destroy a message such that it cannot be recovered even by a determined adversary.
Doing this with standard e-mail mechanisms like S/MIME and PGP/MIME is challenging because of two interrelated factors:</t>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>A copy of of an e-mail message may be retained by any of the mail transport agents that handle it during delivery, and</t>
  <t>The secret key used to decrypt an encrypted e-mail message is typically retained indefinitely.</t>
</list></t>

<t>This means that an adversary aiming to recover the cleartext contents of a deleted message can do so by getting access to a copy of the encrypted message and the long-term secret key material.</t>

<t>Some mitigation measures may be available to make it possible to delete some encrypted messages securely, but this document considers this use case out of scope.
A future version of the document may elaborate on secure message deleton in more detail.</t>

</section>
<section anchor="interaction-with-opportunistic-encryption"><name>Interaction with Opportunistic Encryption</name>

<t>This document focuses on guidance for strong, user-comprehensible end-to-end cryptographic protections for e-mail.
Other approaches are possible, including various forms of opportunistic and transport encryption, which are out of scope for this document.</t>

<t>A future version of this document could describe the interaction between this guidance and more opportunistic forms of encryption, for example some of the scenarios contemplated in <xref target="I-D.dkg-mail-cleartext-copy"/>.</t>

</section>
</section>
<section anchor="document-history"><name>Document History</name>

<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-08-to-draft-ietf-09"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-08 to draft-ietf-...-09</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Clarify goals of document</t>
  <t>Identify cross-protocol attacks in more detail to justify prescription against key reuse</t>
  <t>Add informative references to Opportunistic Encryption RFC and Certificate Best Practice draft</t>
  <t>Add "Reading Encrypted Messages after Certificate Expiration" section to Common Pitfalls and Guidelines</t>
  <t>Clean up nits identified by Stephen Farrell and Eliot Lear</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-07-to-draft-ietf-08"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-07 to draft-ietf-...-08</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Add guidance about importing and exporting secret key material</t>
  <t>More explanation about "encryption outside, signature inside"</t>
  <t>Guidance about Intervening (resending) MUAs</t>
  <t>Include Sender and Resent-* as user-facing headers</t>
  <t>Guidance about external subresources for cryptographically protected messages</t>
  <t>Relax "user-facing" definition to be more advisory</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-06-to-draft-ietf-07"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-06 to draft-ietf-...-07</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Add Bernie Hoeneisen and Alexey Melnikov as editors</t>
  <t>Explicitly avoid requiring anything from IANA</t>
  <t>Simplify description of "attachments"</t>
  <t>Add concrete detail on how to compare e-mail addresses</t>
  <t>Explicitly define "Cryptographic Summary"</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-05-to-draft-ietf-06"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-05 to draft-ietf-...-06</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Expand proxy implementation warning to comparable APIs</t>
  <t>Move many marked TODO and FIXME items to "Future Work"</t>
  <t>More detailed guidance on local certificates</t>
  <t>Provide guidance on encrypting draft messages</t>
  <t>More detailed guidanc eon shipping certificates in outbound messages</t>
  <t>Recommend implementing header protection</t>
  <t>Added "Future Work" subsection about interactions with opportunistic approaches</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-04-to-draft-ietf-05"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-04 to draft-ietf-...-05</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Adopt and update text about Bcc from draft-ietf-lamps-header-protection</t>
  <t>Add section about the dangers of an implementation based on a network protocol proxy</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-03-to-draft-ietf-04"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-03 to draft-ietf-...-04</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Added reference to <spanx style="verb">multipart/oracle</spanx> attacks</t>
  <t>Clarified that "Structural Headers" are the same as RFC2045's "MIME Headers"</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-02-to-draft-ietf-03"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-02 to draft-ietf-...-03</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Added section about mixed recipients</t>
  <t>Noted SMIMEA and OPENPGPKEY DNS RR cert discovery mechanisms</t>
  <t>Added more notes about simplified mental models</t>
  <t>More clarification on one-status-per-message</t>
  <t>Added guidance to defend against EFAIL</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-01-to-draft-ietf-02"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-01 to draft-ietf-...-02</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Added definition of "user-facing" headers</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-ietf-00-to-draft-ietf-01"><name>Substantive changes from draft-ietf-...-00 to draft-ietf-...-01</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>Added section about distinguishing Main Body Parts and Attachments</t>
  <t>Updated document considerations section, including reference to auto-built editor's copy</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-dkg-01-to-draft-ietf-00"><name>Substantive changes from draft-dkg-...-01 to draft-ietf-...-00</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>WG adopted draft</t>
  <t>moved Document History and Document Considerations sections to end of appendix, to avoid section renumbering when removed</t>
</list></t>

</section>
<section anchor="substantive-changes-from-draft-dkg-00-to-draft-dkg-01"><name>Substantive changes from draft-dkg-...-00 to draft-dkg-...-01</name>

<t><list style="symbols">
  <t>consideration of success/failure indicators for usability</t>
  <t>clarify extendedKeyUsage and keyUsage algorithm-specific details</t>
  <t>initial section on certificate management</t>
  <t>added more TODO items</t>
</list></t>

</section>
</section>


  </back>

<!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>

