<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<reference anchor="I-D.ietf-tls-ctls" target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-tls-ctls-10">
   <front>
      <title>Compact TLS 1.3</title>
      <author initials="E." surname="Rescorla" fullname="Eric Rescorla">
         <organization>Windy Hill Systems, LLC</organization>
      </author>
      <author initials="R." surname="Barnes" fullname="Richard Barnes">
         <organization>Cisco</organization>
      </author>
      <author initials="H." surname="Tschofenig" fullname="Hannes Tschofenig">
         </author>
      <author initials="B. M." surname="Schwartz" fullname="Benjamin M. Schwartz">
         <organization>Meta Platforms, Inc.</organization>
      </author>
      <date month="April" day="17" year="2024" />
      <abstract>
	 <t>   This document specifies a &quot;compact&quot; version of TLS 1.3 and DTLS 1.3.
   It saves bandwidth by trimming obsolete material, tighter encoding, a
   template-based specialization technique, and alternative
   cryptographic techniques. cTLS is not directly interoperable with TLS
   1.3 or DTLS 1.3 since the over-the-wire framing is different.  A
   single server can, however, offer cTLS alongside TLS or DTLS.

	 </t>
      </abstract>
   </front>
   <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-tls-ctls-10" />
   
</reference>
