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DRIP Entity Tag (DET) for Unmanned Aircraft System Remote Identification (UAS RID)
draft-ietf-drip-rid-09

The information below is for an old version of the document.
Document Type
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 9374.
Authors Robert Moskowitz , Stuart W. Card , Adam Wiethuechter , Andrei Gurtov
Last updated 2021-08-09
Replaces draft-ietf-drip-uas-rid
RFC stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
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Additional resources Mailing list discussion
Stream WG state WG Document
Associated WG milestones
Sep 2020
Solution space documents adopted by the WG
Dec 2021
Submit DRIP UAS Remote ID to the IESG
Document shepherd Mohamed Boucadair
IESG IESG state Became RFC 9374 (Proposed Standard)
Consensus boilerplate Yes
Telechat date (None)
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Send notices to mohamed.boucadair@orange.com
draft-ietf-drip-rid-09
DRIP                                                        R. Moskowitz
Internet-Draft                                            HTT Consulting
Updates: 7401, 7343 (if approved)                                S. Card
Intended status: Standards Track                         A. Wiethuechter
Expires: 10 February 2022                             AX Enterprize, LLC
                                                               A. Gurtov
                                                    Linköping University
                                                           9 August 2021

DRIP Entity Tag (DET) for Unmanned Aircraft System Remote Identification
                               (UAS RID)
                         draft-ietf-drip-rid-09

Abstract

   This document describes the use of Hierarchical Host Identity Tags
   (HHITs) as self-asserting IPv6 addresses and thereby a trustable
   identifier for use as the Unmanned Aircraft System Remote
   Identification and tracking (UAS RID).  Within the context of RID,
   HHITs will be called DRIP Entity Tags (DET).  HHITs self-attest to
   the included explicit hierarchy that provides Registrar discovery for
   3rd-party identifier attestation.

Status of This Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute
   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-
   Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
   and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

   This Internet-Draft will expire on 10 February 2022.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2021 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

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   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/
   license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.
   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
   and restrictions with respect to this document.  Code Components
   extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text
   as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are
   provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
   2.  Terms and Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     2.1.  Requirements Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     2.2.  Notations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     2.3.  Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   3.  The Hierarchical Host Identity Tag (HHIT) . . . . . . . . . .   5
     3.1.  HHIT prefix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
     3.2.  HHIT Suite IDs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
       3.2.1.  8 bit HIT Suite IDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
     3.3.  The Hierarchy ID (HID)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
       3.3.1.  The Registered Assigning Authority (RAA)  . . . . . .   7
       3.3.2.  The Hierarchical HIT Domain Authority (HDA) . . . . .   7
     3.4.  Edward Digital Signature Algorithm for HITs . . . . . . .   8
       3.4.1.  HOST_ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
       3.4.2.  HIT_SUITE_LIST  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     3.5.  ORCHIDs for Hierarchical HITs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
       3.5.1.  Adding additional information to the ORCHID . . . . .  10
       3.5.2.  ORCHID Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
       3.5.3.  ORCHID Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
       3.5.4.  Decoding ORCHIDs for HITv2  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   4.  Hierarchical HITs as Remote ID DRIP Entity Tags (DET) . . . .  13
     4.1.  Nontransferablity of HHITs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     4.2.  Encoding HHITs in CTA 2063-A Serial Numbers . . . . . . .  13
     4.3.  Remote ID DET as one class of Hierarchical HITs . . . . .  14
     4.4.  Hierarchy in ORCHID Generation  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     4.5.  DRIP Entity Tag (DET) Registry  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     4.6.  Remote ID Authentication using DETs . . . . . . . . . . .  15
   5.  DRIP Entity Tags (DET) in DNS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
   6.  Other UTM uses of HHITs beyond DET  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   7.  DRIP Requirements addressed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
   8.  ASTM Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
   9.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
     9.1.  New IPv6 prefix needed for HHITs  . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
     10.1.  DET Trust  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     10.2.  Collision risks with DETs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   11. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20

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     11.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
     11.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   Appendix A.  EU U-Space RID Privacy Considerations  . . . . . . .  23
   Appendix B.  Example HHIT Self Attestation  . . . . . . . . . . .  24
     B.1.  HHIT Offline Self Attestation . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   Appendix C.  Calculating Collision Probabilities  . . . . . . . .  25
   Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26

1.  Introduction

   [drip-requirements] describes an Unmanned Aircraft System Remote
   Identification and tracking (UAS ID) as unique (ID-4), non-spoofable
   (ID-5), and identify a registry where the ID is listed (ID-2); all
   within a 20 character identifier (ID-1).

   This document describes the use of Hierarchical Host Identity Tags
   (HHITs) (Section 3) as self-asserting IPv6 addresses and thereby a
   trustable identifier for use as the UAS Remote ID.  HHITs include
   explicit hierarchy to enable DNS HHIT queries (Host ID for
   authentication, e.g. [drip-authentication]) and for EPP Registrar
   discovery [RFC7484] for 3rd-party identification attestation (e.g.
   [drip-authentication]).

   HHITs as used within the context of UAS will be labeled as DRIP
   Entity Tags (DET).  Throughout this document HHIT and DET will be
   used appropriately.  HHIT will be used when convering the technology,
   and DET for their context within UAS RID.

   HITs are statistically unique through the cryptographic hash feature
   of second-preimage resistance.  The cryptographically-bound addition
   of the Hierarchy and a HHIT registration process [drip-registries]
   provide complete, global HHIT uniqueness.  This is in contrast to
   using general identifiers (e.g. a Universally Unique IDentifier
   (UUID) [RFC4122] or device serial number) as the subject in an X.509
   [RFC5280] certificate.

   In a multi-CA (multi Certificate Authority) PKI alternative to HHITs,
   a Remote ID as the Subject (Section 4.1.2.6 of [RFC5280]) can occur
   in multiple CAs, possibly fraudulently.  CAs within the PKI would
   need to implement an approach to enforce assurance of the uniqueness
   achieved with HHITs.

   Hierarchical HITs provide self-attestation of the HHIT registry.  A
   HHIT can only be in a single registry within a registry system (e.g.
   Extensible Provisioning Protocol (EPP) [RFC5730] and DNS).

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   Hierarchical HITs are valid, though non-routable, IPv6 addresses
   [RFC8200].  As such, they fit in many ways within various IETF
   technologies.

2.  Terms and Definitions

2.1.  Requirements Terminology

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP
   14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
   capitals, as shown here.

2.2.  Notations

   |  Signifies concatenation of information - e.g., X | Y is the
      concatenation of X and Y.

   Claim(X,Y):
      Form of a predicate (X is Y, X has property Y, and most
      importantly X owns Y).

   Assertion({X...}):
      A set of one or more claims.  This definition is borrowed from
      JWT/CWT ([RFC7519]/[RFC8392]).

   Attestation(X,Y):
      A signed claim.  X attests to Y.

   Certificate(X,Y):
      A claim or attestation, Y, signed exclusively by a third party, X,
      and are only over identities.

2.3.  Definitions

   This document uses the terms defined in [drip-requirements].  The
   following new terms are used in the document:

   cSHAKE (The customizable SHAKE function [NIST.SP.800-185]):
      Extends the SHAKE [NIST.FIPS.202] scheme to allow users to
      customize their use of the SHAKE function.

   HDA (Hierarchical HIT Domain Authority):
      The 16-bit field that identifies the HHIT Domain Authority under
      an Registered Assigning Authority (RAA).

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   HHIT
      Hierarchical Host Identity Tag.  A HIT with extra hierarchical
      information not found in a standard HIT [RFC7401].

   HI
      Host Identity.  The public key portion of an asymmetric key pair
      used in HIP.

   HID (Hierarchy ID):
      The 32 bit field providing the HIT Hierarchy ID.

   HIP (Host Identity Protocol)
      The origin of HI, HIT, and HHIT, required for DRIP.

   HIT
      Host Identity Tag.  A 128-bit handle on the HI.  HITs are valid
      IPv6 addresses.

   Keccak (KECCAK Message Authentication Code):
      The family of all sponge functions with a KECCAK-f permutation as
      the underlying function and multi-rate padding as the padding
      rule.  In particular all the functions referenced from
      [NIST.FIPS.202] and [NIST.SP.800-185].

   KMAC (KECCAK Message Authentication Code [NIST.SP.800-185]):
      A PRF and keyed hash function based on KECCAK.

   RAA (Registered Assigning Authority):
      The 16 bit field identifying the business or organization that
      manages a registry of HDAs.

   RVS (Rendezvous Server):
      The HIP Rendezvous Server for enabling mobility, as defined in
      [RFC8004].

   SHAKE (Secure Hash Algorithm KECCAK [NIST.FIPS.202]):
      A secure hash that allows for an arbitrary output length.

   XOF (eXtendable-Output Function [NIST.FIPS.202]):
      A function on bit strings (also called messages) in which the
      output can be extended to any desired length.

3.  The Hierarchical Host Identity Tag (HHIT)

   The Hierarchical HIT (HHIT) is a small but important enhancement over
   the flat HIT space.  By adding two levels of hierarchical
   administration control, the HHIT provides for device registration/
   ownership, thereby enhancing the trust framework for HITs.

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   HHITs represent the HI in only a 64 bit hash and uses the other 32
   bits to create a hierarchical administration organization for HIT
   domains.  Hierarchical HIT construction is defined in Section 3.5.
   The input values for the Encoding rules are in Section 3.5.1.

   A HHIT is built from the following fields:

   *  IANA prefix (max 28 bit)

   *  32 bit Hierarchy ID (HID)

   *  4 (or 8) bit HIT Suite ID

   *  ORCHID hash (96 - prefix length - Suite ID length bits, e.g. 64)
      See Section 3.5

   The Context ID for the ORCHID hash is:

       Context ID :=  0x00B5 A69C 795D F5D5 F008 7F56 843F 2C40

3.1.  HHIT prefix

   A unique IANA IPv6 prefix, no larger than 28 bit, for HHITs is
   recommended.  It clearly separates the flat-space HIT processing from
   HHIT processing per Section 3.5.

   Without a unique prefix, the first 4 bits of the RRA would be
   interpreted as the HIT Suite ID per HIPv2 [RFC7401].

3.2.  HHIT Suite IDs

   The HIT Suite IDs specifies the HI and hash algorithms.  Any HIT
   Suite ID can be used for HHITs.  The 8 bit format is supported (only
   when the first 4 bits are ZERO), but this reduces the ORCHID hash
   length.

3.2.1.  8 bit HIT Suite IDs

   Support for 8 bit HIT Suite IDs is allowed in Section 5.2.10 of
   [RFC7401], but not specified in how ORCHIDs are generated with these
   longer OGAs.  Section 3.5 provides the algorithmic flexibility,
   allowing for HDA custom HIT Suite IDs as follows:

        HIT Suite             Four-bit ID    Eight-bit encoding
        HDA Assigned 1            NA         TBD3 (suggested value 0x0E)
        HDA Assigned 2            NA         TBD4 (suggested value 0x0F)

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   This feature may be used for large-scale experimenting with post
   quantum computing hashes or similar domain specific needs.  Note that
   currently there is no support for domain specific HI algorithms.

3.3.  The Hierarchy ID (HID)

   The Hierarchy ID (HID) provides the structure to organize HITs into
   administrative domains.  HIDs are further divided into 2 fields:

   *  16 bit Registered Assigning Authority (RAA)

   *  16 bit Hierarchical HIT Domain Authority (HDA)

3.3.1.  The Registered Assigning Authority (RAA)

   An RAA is a business or organization that manages a registry of HDAs.
   For example, the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) could be an RAA.

   The RAA is a 16 bit field (65,536 RAAs) assigned by a numbers
   management organization, perhaps ICANN's IANA service.  An RAA must
   provide a set of services to allocate HDAs to organizations.  It must
   have a public policy on what is necessary to obtain an HDA.  The RAA
   need not maintain any HIP related services.  It must maintain a DNS
   zone minimally for discovering HID RVS servers.

   As HHITs may be used in many different domains, RAA should be
   allocated in blocks with consideration on the likely size of a
   particular usage.  Alternatively, different Prefixes can be used to
   separate different domains of use of HHTs.

   This DNS zone may be a PTR for its RAA.  It may be a zone in a HHIT
   specific DNS zone.  Assume that the RAA is 100.  The PTR record could
   be constructed:

   100.hhit.arpa   IN PTR      raa.bar.com.

3.3.2.  The Hierarchical HIT Domain Authority (HDA)

   An HDA may be an ISP or any third party that takes on the business to
   provide RVS and other needed services for HIP enabled devices.

   The HDA is an 16 bit field (65,536 HDAs per RAA) assigned by an RAA.
   An HDA should maintain a set of RVS servers that its client HIP-
   enabled customers use.  How this is done and scales to the
   potentially millions of customers is outside the scope of this
   document.  This service should be discoverable through the DNS zone
   maintained by the HDA's RAA.

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   An RAA may assign a block of values to an individual organization.
   This is completely up to the individual RAA's published policy for
   delegation.

3.4.  Edward Digital Signature Algorithm for HITs

   Edwards-Curve Digital Signature Algorithm (EdDSA) [RFC8032] are
   specified here for use as Host Identities (HIs) per HIPv2 [RFC7401].
   Further the HIT_SUITE_LIST is specified as used in [RFC7343].

   See Section 3.2 for use of the HIT Suite for this document.

3.4.1.  HOST_ID

   The HOST_ID parameter specifies the public key algorithm, and for
   elliptic curves, a name.  The HOST_ID parameter is defined in
   Section 5.2.19 of [RFC7401].

        Algorithm
        profiles    Values

        EdDSA       TBD1 (suggested value 13) [RFC8032]    (RECOMMENDED)

   For hosts that implement EdDSA as the algorithm, the following EdDSA
   curves are available:

        Algorithm    Curve            Values

        EdDSA        RESERVED         0
        EdDSA        EdDSA25519       1 [RFC8032]
        EdDSA        EdDSA25519ph     2 [RFC8032]
        EdDSA        EdDSA448         3 [RFC8032]
        EdDSA        EdDSA448ph       4 [RFC8032]

3.4.2.  HIT_SUITE_LIST

   The HIT_SUITE_LIST parameter contains a list of the supported HIT
   suite IDs of the Responder.  Based on the HIT_SUITE_LIST, the
   Initiator can determine which source HIT Suite IDs are supported by
   the Responder.  The HIT_SUITE_LIST parameter is defined in
   Section 5.2.10 of [RFC7401].

   The following HIT Suite ID is defined, and the relationship between
   the four-bit ID value used in the OGA ID field and the eight-bit
   encoding within the HIT_SUITE_LIST ID field is clarified:

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        HIT Suite        4-bit ID                   8-bit encoding
        RESERVED         0                          0x00
        EdDSA/cSHAKE128  TBD2 (suggested value 5)   0x50   (RECOMMENDED)

   The following table provides more detail on the above HIT Suite
   combinations.  The input for each generation algorithm is the
   encoding of the HI as defined in this Appendix.

   The output of cSHAKE128 is variable per the needs of a specific
   ORCHID construction.  It is at most 96 bits long and is directly used
   in the ORCHID (without truncation).

     +=======+===========+=========+===========+====================+
     | Index | Hash      | HMAC    | Signature | Description        |
     |       | function  |         | algorithm |                    |
     |       |           |         | family    |                    |
     +=======+===========+=========+===========+====================+
     |     5 | cSHAKE128 | KMAC128 | EdDSA     | EdDSA HI hashed    |
     |       |           |         |           | with cSHAKE128,    |
     |       |           |         |           | output is variable |
     +-------+-----------+---------+-----------+--------------------+

                           Table 1: HIT Suites

3.5.  ORCHIDs for Hierarchical HITs

   This section improves on ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] with three enhancements:

   *  Optional Info field between the Prefix and OGA ID.

   *  Increased flexibility on the length of each component in the
      ORCHID construction, provided the resulting ORCHID is 128 bits.

   *  Use of cSHAKE, NIST SP 800-185 [NIST.SP.800-185], for the hashing
      function.

   The Keccak [Keccak] based cSHAKE XOF hash function is a variable
   output length hash function.  As such it does not use the truncation
   operation that other hashes need.  The invocation of cSHAKE specifies
   the desired number of bits in the hash output.  Further, cSHAKE has a
   parameter 'S' as a customization bit string.  This parameter will be
   used for including the ORCHID Context Identifier in a standard
   fashion.

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   This ORCHID construction includes the fields in the ORCHID in the
   hash to protect them against substitution attacks.  It also provides
   for inclusion of additional information, in particular the
   hierarchical bits of the Hierarchical HIT, in the ORCHID generation.
   This should be viewed as an addendum to ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343], as it can
   produce ORCHIDv2 output.

3.5.1.  Adding additional information to the ORCHID

   ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] is currently defined as consisting of three
   components:

   ORCHID     :=  Prefix | OGA ID | Encode_96( Hash )

   where:

   Prefix          : A constant 28-bit-long bitstring value
                     (IANA IPv6 assigned).

   OGA ID          : A 4-bit long identifier for the Hash_function
                     in use within the specific usage context.  When
                     used for HIT generation this is the HIT Suite ID.

   Encode_96( )    : An extraction function in which output is obtained
                     by extracting the middle 96-bit-long bitstring
                     from the argument bitstring.

   This addendum will be constructed as follows:

   ORCHID     :=  Prefix (p) | Info (n) | OGA ID (o) | Hash (m)

   where:

   Prefix (p)      : An IANA IPv6 assigned prefix (max 28-bit-long).

   Info (n)        : n bits of information that define a use of the
                     ORCHID.  n can be zero, that is no additional
                     information.

   OGA ID (o)      : A 4 or 8 bit long identifier for the Hash_function
                     in use within the specific usage context.  When
                     used for HIT generation this is the HIT Suite ID.

   Hash (m)        : An extraction function in which output is m bits.

   p + n + o + m = 128 bits

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   With a 28 bit IPv6 Prefix, the remaining 100 bits can be divided in
   any manner between the additional information, OGA ID, and the hash
   output.  Care must be taken in determining the size of the hash
   portion, taking into account risks like pre-image attacks.  Thus 64
   bits as used in Hierarchical HITs may be as small as is acceptable.
   Note that if a 8 bit OGA is used, the hash may be 4 bits shorter.
   This may result in a greater risk of pre-image attacks and a
   corresponding greater need to manage HHIT registration and require
   look up of the HI from a trusted source.

3.5.2.  ORCHID Encoding

   This addendum adds a different encoding process to that currently
   used in ORCHIDv2.  The input to the hash function explicitly includes
   all the header content plus the Context ID.  The header content
   consists of the Prefix, the Additional Information, and OGA ID (HIT
   Suite ID).  Secondly, the length of the resulting hash is set by sum
   of the length of the ORCHID header fields.  For example, a 28 bit
   Prefix with 32 bits for the HID and 4 bits for the OGA ID leaves 64
   bits for the hash length.

   To achieve the variable length output in a consistent manner, the
   cSHAKE hash is used.  For this purpose, cSHAKE128 is appropriate.
   The the cSHAKE function call for this addendum is:

       cSHAKE128(Input, L, "", Context ID)

       Input      :=  Prefix | Additional Information | OGA ID | HOST_ID
       L          :=  Length in bits of hash portion of ORCHID

   For full Suite ID support (those that use fixed length hashes like
   SHA256), the following hashing can be used (Note: this does NOT
   produce output Identical to ORCHIDv2 for Prefix of /28 and Additional
   Information of ZERO length):

       Hash[L](Context ID | Input)

       Input      :=  Prefix | Additional Information | OGA ID | HOST_ID
       L          :=  Length in bits of hash portion of ORCHID

       Hash[L]    :=  An extraction function in which output is obtained
                      by extracting the middle L-bit-long bitstring
                      from the argument bitstring.

   Hierarchical HIT uses the same context as all other HIPv2 HIT Suites
   as they are clearly separated by the distinct HIT Suite ID.

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3.5.2.1.  Encoding ORCHIDs for HITv2

   This section is included to provide backwards compatibility for
   ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] as used for HITv2 [RFC7401].

   For HITv2s, the Prefix MUST be 2001:20::/28.  Info is length ZERO
   (not included), and OGA ID is length 4.  Thus the HI Hash is length
   96.  Further the Prefix and OGA ID are NOT included in the hash
   calculation.  Thus the following ORCHID calculations for fixed output
   length hashes are used:

       Hash[L](Context ID | Input)

       Input      :=  HOST_ID
       L          :=  96
       Context ID :=  0xF0EF F02F BFF4 3D0F E793 0C3C 6E61 74EA

       Hash[L]    :=  An extraction function in which output is obtained
                      by extracting the middle L-bit-long bitstring
                      from the argument bitstring.

   For variable output length hashes use:

       Hash[L](Context ID | Input)

       Input      :=  HOST_ID
       L          :=  96
       Context ID :=  0xF0EF F02F BFF4 3D0F E793 0C3C 6E61 74EA

       Hash[L]    :=  The L bit output from the hash function

   Then the ORCHID is constructed as follows:

       Prefix | OGA ID | Hash Output

3.5.3.  ORCHID Decoding

   With this addendum, the decoding of an ORCHID is determined by the
   Prefix and OGA ID (HIT Suite ID).  ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] decoding is
   selected when the Prefix is: 2001:20::/28.

   For Hierarchical HITs, the decoding is determined by the presence of
   the HHIT Prefix as specified in the HHIT document.

3.5.4.  Decoding ORCHIDs for HITv2

   This section is included to provide backwards compatibility for
   ORCHIDv2 [RFC7343] as used for HITv2 [RFC7401].

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   HITv2s are identified by a Prefix of 2001:20::/28.  The next 4 bits
   are the OGA ID. is length 4.  The remaining 96 bits are the HI Hash.

4.  Hierarchical HITs as Remote ID DRIP Entity Tags (DET)

   Hierarchical HITs are a refinement on the Host Identity Tag (HIT) of
   HIPv2 [RFC7401].  HHITs require a new Overlay Routable Cryptographic
   Hash Identifier (ORCHID [RFC7343]) mechanism as described in
   Section 3.5.  HHITs for UAS ID (DET) also use the new EdDSA/SHAKE128
   HIT suite defined in Section 3.4 (GEN-2 in [drip-requirements]).
   This hierarchy, cryptographically embedded within the HHIT, provides
   the information for finding the UA's HHIT registry (ID-3 in
   [drip-requirements]).

   ASTM Standard Specification for Remote ID and Tracking [F3411-19]
   specifies three UAS ID types:

   TYPE-1  A static, manufacturer assigned, hardware serial number per
           ANSI/CTA-2063-A "Small Unmanned Aerial System Serial Numbers"
           [CTA2063A].

   TYPE-2  A CAA assigned (presumably static) ID.

   TYPE-3  A UTM system assigned UUID [RFC4122].  These can be dynamic,
           but do not need to be.

   For HHITs to be used effectively as UAS IDs, F3411 should add UAS ID
   type 4 as DET.

4.1.  Nontransferablity of HHITs

   A HI and its HHIT SHOULD NOT be transferable between UA or even
   between replacement electronics (e.g. replacement of damaged
   controller CPU) for a UA.  The private key for the HI SHOULD be held
   in a cryptographically secure component.

4.2.  Encoding HHITs in CTA 2063-A Serial Numbers

   In some cases it is advantageous to encode HHITs as a CTA 2063-A
   Serial Number [CTA2063A].  For example, the FAA Remote ID Rules
   [FAA_RID] state that a Remote ID Module (i.e. not integrated with UA
   controller) must only use "the serial number of the unmanned
   aircraft"; CTA 2063-A meets this requirement.

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   Encoding a HHIT within the 2063-A format is not simple.  There is no
   place for the HID; there will need to be a mapping service from
   Manufacturer Code to HID.  The HIT Suite ID and ORCHID hash will take
   14 characters (see below), leaving only 1 character for the
   Manufacturer's use of other information.

   A character in a CTA 2063-A Serial Number "shall include any
   combination of digits and uppercase letters, except the letters O and
   I, but may include all digits".  This would allow for a Base34
   encoding of the binary HIT Suite ID and ORCHID hash.  Although,
   programatically, such a conversion is not hard, other technologies
   (e.g. credit card payment systems) that have used such odd base
   encoding have had performance challenges.  Thus here a Base32
   encoding will be used by also excluding the letters Z and S (too
   similar to the digits 2 and 5).

   The low-order 68 bits (HIT Suite ID | ORCHID hash) of the HHIT SHALL
   be left-padded with 2 bits of ZERO.  This 70 bit number will be
   encoded into 14 characters using the digit/letters above.  The
   Manufacturer MAY use a Length Code of 14 or 15.  If 15, the first
   character after the Length Code is set by the Manufacturer with the
   low order 14 characters for the encoded HIT Suite ID and ORCHID hash.

   A mapping service (e.g.  DNS) MUST provide a trusted (e.g. via
   DNSSEC) conversion of the 4 character Manufacturer Code to high-order
   60 bits (Prefix | HID) of the HHIT.  Definition of this mapping
   service is currently out of scope of this document.

4.3.  Remote ID DET as one class of Hierarchical HITs

   UAS Remote ID DET may be one of a number of uses of HHITs.  However,
   it is out of the scope of the document to elaborate on other uses of
   HHITs.  As such these follow-on uses need to be considered in
   allocating the RAAs Section 3.3.1 or HHIT prefix assignments
   Section 9.

4.4.  Hierarchy in ORCHID Generation

   ORCHIDS, as defined in [RFC7343], do not cryptographically bind an
   IPv6 prefix nor the Orchid Generation Algorithm (OGA) ID (the HIT
   Suite ID) to the hash of the HI.  The rational at the time of
   developing ORCHID was attacks against these fields are DoS attacks
   against protocols using ORCHIDs and thus up to those protocols to
   address the issue.

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   HHITs, as defined in Section 3.5, cryptographically bind all content
   in the ORCHID through the hashing function.  A recipient of a DET
   that has the underlying HI can directly trust and act on all content
   in the HHIT.  This provides a strong, self-attestation for using the
   hierarchy to find the DET Registry based on the HID.

4.5.  DRIP Entity Tag (DET) Registry

   DETs are registered to Hierarchical HIT Domain Authorities (HDAs).  A
   registration process, [drip-registries], ensures DET global
   uniqueness (ID-4 in [drip-requirements]).  It also provides the
   mechanism to create UAS Public/Private data that are associated with
   the DET (REG-1 and REG-2 in [drip-requirements]).

   The two levels of hierarchy within the DET allows for CAAs to have
   their own Registered Assigning Authority (RAA) for their National Air
   Space (NAS).  Within the RAA, the CAAs can delegate HDAs as needed.
   There may be other RAAs allowed to operate within a given NAS; this
   is a policy decision by the CAA.

4.6.  Remote ID Authentication using DETs

   The EdDSA25519 Host Identity (HI) [Section 3.4] underlying the DET
   can be used in an 84-byte self proof attestation as shown in
   Appendix B to provide proof of Remote ID ownership (GEN-1 in
   [drip-requirements]).  A lookup service like DNS can provide the HI
   and registration proof (GEN-3 in [drip-requirements]).

   Similarly the 200-byte offline self-attestation shown in Appendix B.1
   provides the same proofs without Internet access and with a small
   cache that contains the HDA's HI/HHIT and HDA meta-data.  These self-
   attestations are carried in the ASTM Authentication Message (Msg Type
   0x2).

   Hashes of previously sent ASTM messages can be placed in a signed
   "Manifest" Authentication Message (GEN-2 in [drip-requirements]).
   This can be either a standalone Authentication Message, or an
   enhanced self attestation Authentication Message.  Alternatively the
   ASTM Message Pack (Msg Type 0xF) can provide this feature, but only
   over Bluetooth 5 or WiFi BEACON or NAN broadcasts.

5.  DRIP Entity Tags (DET) in DNS

   There are two approaches for storing and retrieving the DET using
   DNS.  These are:

   *  As FQDNs in the .aero TLD.

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   *  Reverse DNS lookups as IPv6 addresses per [RFC8005].

   A DET can be used to construct an FQDN that points to the USS that
   has the Public/Private information for the UA (REG-1 and REG-2 in
   [drip-requirements]).  For example, the USS for the HHIT could be
   found via the following: Assume the RAA is 100 and the HDA is 50.
   The PTR record is constructed as:

       100.50.det.uas.aero   IN PTR      foo.uss.aero.

   The individual DETs are potentially too numerous (e.g. 60 - 600M) and
   dynamic (new DETs every minute for some HDAs) to actually store in a
   signed, DNS zone.  The HDA SHOULD provide DNS service for its zone
   and provide the HHIT detail response.  A secure connection (e.g.  DNS
   over TLS) to the authoritative zone may be a viable alternative to
   DNSSEC.

   The DET reverse lookup can be a standard IPv6 reverse look up, or it
   can leverage off the HHIT structure.  Assume a prefix of
   2001:30::/28, the RAA is 10 and the HDA is 20 and the DET is:

       2001:30:a0:145:a3ad:1952:ad0:a69e

   A DET reverse lookup could be to:

       a69e.ad0.1952.a3ad.145.a0.30.2001.20.10.det.arpa.

   A 'standard' ip6.arpa RR has the advantage of only one Registry
   service supported.

       $ORIGIN  5.4.1.0.0.a.0.0.0.3.0.0.1.0.0.2.ip6.arpa.
       e.9.6.a.0.d.a.0.2.5.9.1.d.a.3.a    IN   PTR

6.  Other UTM uses of HHITs beyond DET

   HHITs might be used within the UTM architecture beyond DET (and USS
   in UA ID registration and authentication).  This includes a GCS HHIT
   ID.  The GCS may use its HIIT if it is the source of Network Remote
   ID for securing the transport and for secure C2 transport (e.g.
   [drip-secure-nrid-c2]).

   Observers may have their own HHITs to facilitate UAS information
   retrieval (e.g., for authorization to private UAS data).  They could
   also use their HHIT for establishing a HIP connection with the UA
   Pilot for direct communications per authorization (this use is
   currently outside the scope).  Further, they can be used by FINDER
   observers, (e.g. [crowd-sourced-rid]).

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7.  DRIP Requirements addressed

   This document in the previous sections provides the details to
   solutions for GEN 1 - 3, ID 1 - 5, and REG 1 - 2 as describled in
   [drip-requirements].

8.  ASTM Considerations

   ASTM will need to make the following additional value to the "UA ID"
   in the Basic Message (Msg Type 0x0):

   Type 4:
      This document UA ID of DRIP Entity Tags, DET (see Section 4).

   The DET authors will participate in ASTM to enact this change.

9.  IANA Considerations

   This document requests IANA to make the following changes to the IANA
   "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Parameters" registry:

   Host ID:
      This document defines the new EdDSA Host ID with value TBD1
      (suggested: 13) (see Section 3.4.1) in the "HI Algorithm"
      subregistry of the "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Parameters"
      registry.

   EdDSA Curve Label:
      This document specifies a new algorithm-specific subregistry named
      "EdDSA Curve Label".  The values for this subregistry are defined
      in Section 3.4.1.

   HIT Suite ID:
      This document defines the new HIT Suite of EdDSA/cSHAKE with value
      TBD2 (suggested: 5) (see Section 3.4.2) in the "HIT Suite ID"
      subregistry of the "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Parameters"
      registry.

   HIT Suite ID eight-bit encoding:
      This document defines the first eight-bit encoded HIT Suite IDs as
      defined in Section 5.2.10 of [RFC7401].  These are the new HDA
      domain HIT Suites with values TBD3 and TBD4 (suggested: 0x0E and
      0x0F) (see Section 3.2.1).  IANA is requested to expand the "HIT
      Suite ID" subregistry of the "Host Identity Protocol (HIP)
      Parameters" registry to show both the four-bit and eight-bit
      values as shown in Section 5.2.10 of [RFC7401] and add these new
      values that only have eight bit representations.

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9.1.  New IPv6 prefix needed for HHITs

   Because HHIT format is not compatible with [RFC7343], IANA is
   requested to allocated a new 28-bit prefix out of the IANA IPv6
   Special Purpose Address Block, namely 2001:0000::/23, as per
   [RFC6890] (suggested: 2001:30::/28).

10.  Security Considerations

   The 64-bit hash in HHITs presents a real risk of second pre-image
   cryptographic hash attack Section 10.2.  There are no known (to the
   authors) studies of hash size to cryptographic hash attacks.  A
   PYTHON script is available to randomly generate 1M HHITs that did not
   produce a hash collision which is a simpler attack than a first or
   second pre-image attack.

   The DET Registry services effectively block attempts to "take over"
   or "hijack" a DET.  It does not stop a rogue attempting to
   impersonate a known DET.  This attack can be mitigated by the
   receiver of the DET using DNS to find the HI for the DET.  As such,
   use of DNSSEC and DNS over TLS by the DET registries is recommended.

   The 60 bit hash for DETs with 8 bit OGAs may well have hash attack
   risks.  As such its use should be restricted to testing and to small,
   well managed UAS.

   Another mitigation of HHIT hijacking is if the HI owner (UA) supplies
   an object containing the HHIT and signed by the HI private key of the
   HDA such as Appendix B.1 as discussed in Section 4.6.

   The two risks with hierarchical HITs are the use of an invalid HID
   and forced HIT collisions.  The use of a DNS zone (e.g.  "det.arpa.")
   is a strong protection against invalid HIDs.  Querying an HDA's RVS
   for a HIT under the HDA protects against talking to unregistered
   clients.  The Registry service [drip-registries], through its HHIT
   uniqueness enforcement, provides against forced or accidental HHIT
   hash collisions.

   Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) provide an assurance of
   uniqueness.  This is two-fold.  The address (in this case the UAS ID)
   is a hash of a public key and a Registry hierarchy naming.  Collision
   resistance (more important that it implied second-preimage
   resistance) makes it statistically challenging to attacks.  A
   registration process ([drip-registries]) within the HDA provides a
   level of assured uniqueness unattainable without mirroring this
   approach.

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   The second aspect of assured uniqueness is the digital signing
   (attestation) process of the DET by the HI private key and the
   further signing (attestation) of the HI public key by the Registry's
   key.  This completes the ownership process.  The observer at this
   point does not know WHAT owns the DET, but is assured, other than the
   risk of theft of the HI private key, that this UAS ID is owned by
   something and is properly registered.

10.1.  DET Trust

   The DET in the ASTM Basic Message (Msg Type 0x0, the actual Remote ID
   message) does not provide any assertion of trust.  The best that
   might be done within this Basic Message is 4 bytes truncated from a
   HI signing of the HHIT (the UA ID field is 20 bytes and a HHIT is
   16).  This is not trustable; that is, too open to a hash attack.
   Minimally, it takes 84 bytes, Appendix B, to prove ownership of a DET
   with a full EdDSA signature.  Thus no attempt has been made to add
   DET trust directly within the very small Basic Message.

   The ASTM Authentication Message (Msg Type 0x2) as shown in
   Section 4.6 can provide practical actual ownership proofs.  These
   attestations include timestamps to defend against replay attacks.
   But in themselves, they do not prove which UA actually sent the
   message.  They could have been sent by a dog running down the street
   with a Broadcast Remote ID module strapped to its back.

   Proof of UA transmission comes when the Authentication Message
   includes proofs for the ASTM Location/Vector Message (Msg Type 0x1)
   and the observer can see the UA or that information is validated by
   ground multilateration [crowd-sourced-rid].  Only then does an
   observer gain full trust in the DET of the UA.

   DETs obtained via the Network Remote ID path provides a different
   approach to trust.  Here the UAS SHOULD be securely communicating to
   the USS (see [drip-secure-nrid-c2]), thus asserting DET trust.

10.2.  Collision risks with DETs

   The 64 bit hash size does have an increased risk of collisions over
   the 96 bit hash size used for the other HIT Suites.  There is a 0.01%
   probability of a collision in a population of 66 million.  The
   probability goes up to 1% for a population of 663 million.  See
   Appendix C for the collision probability formula.

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   However, this risk of collision is within a single "Additional
   Information" value, i.e. a RAA/HDA domain.  The UAS/USS registration
   process should include registering the DET and MUST reject a
   collision, forcing the UAS to generate a new HI and thus HHIT and
   reapplying to the DET registration process.

11.  References

11.1.  Normative References

   [F3411-19] ASTM International, "Standard Specification for Remote ID
              and Tracking", February 2020,
              <http://www.astm.org/cgi-bin/resolver.cgi?F3411>.

   [NIST.FIPS.202]
              Dworkin, M., "SHA-3 Standard: Permutation-Based Hash and
              Extendable-Output Functions", National Institute of
              Standards and Technology report,
              DOI 10.6028/nist.fips.202, July 2015,
              <https://doi.org/10.6028/nist.fips.202>.

   [NIST.SP.800-185]
              Kelsey, J., Change, S., and R. Perlner, "SHA-3 derived
              functions: cSHAKE, KMAC, TupleHash and ParallelHash",
              National Institute of Standards and Technology report,
              DOI 10.6028/nist.sp.800-185, December 2016,
              <https://doi.org/10.6028/nist.sp.800-185>.

   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

   [RFC6890]  Cotton, M., Vegoda, L., Bonica, R., Ed., and B. Haberman,
              "Special-Purpose IP Address Registries", BCP 153,
              RFC 6890, DOI 10.17487/RFC6890, April 2013,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6890>.

   [RFC8032]  Josefsson, S. and I. Liusvaara, "Edwards-Curve Digital
              Signature Algorithm (EdDSA)", RFC 8032,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC8032, January 2017,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8032>.

   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
              2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

11.2.  Informative References

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   [corus]    CORUS, "U-space Concept of Operations", September 2019,
              <https://www.sesarju.eu/node/3411>.

   [crowd-sourced-rid]
              Moskowitz, R., Card, S. W., Wiethuechter, A., Zhao, S.,
              and H. Birkholz, "Crowd Sourced Remote ID", Work in
              Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-moskowitz-drip-crowd-
              sourced-rid-06, 26 May 2021, <https://tools.ietf.org/html/
              draft-moskowitz-drip-crowd-sourced-rid-06>.

   [CTA2063A] ANSI/CTA, "Small Unmanned Aerial Systems Serial Numbers",
              September 2019, <https://shop.cta.tech/products/small-
              unmanned-aerial-systems-serial-numbers>.

   [drip-authentication]
              Wiethuechter, A., Card, S., and R. Moskowitz, "DRIP
              Authentication Formats", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft,
              draft-ietf-drip-auth-01, 18 June 2021,
              <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-drip-auth-01>.

   [drip-registries]
              Wiethuechter, A., Card, S., and R. Moskowitz, "DRIP
              Registries", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-
              wiethuechter-drip-registries-00, 22 February 2021,
              <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-wiethuechter-drip-
              registries-00>.

   [drip-requirements]
              Card, S. W., Wiethuechter, A., Moskowitz, R., and A.
              Gurtov, "Drone Remote Identification Protocol (DRIP)
              Requirements", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-
              ietf-drip-reqs-17, 7 July 2021,
              <https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-drip-reqs-17>.

   [drip-secure-nrid-c2]
              Moskowitz, R., Card, S., Wiethuechter, A., and A. Gurtov,
              "Secure UAS Network RID and C2 Transport", Work in
              Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-moskowitz-drip-secure-
              nrid-c2-03, 2 August 2021, <https://tools.ietf.org/html/
              draft-moskowitz-drip-secure-nrid-c2-03>.

   [FAA_RID]  United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA),
              "Remote Identification of Unmanned Aircraft", 2021,
              <https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2021-01-15/
              pdf/2020-28948.pdf>.

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   [Keccak]   Bertoni, G., Daemen, J., Peeters, M., Van Assche, G., and
              R. Van Keer, "The Keccak Function",
              <https://keccak.team/index.html>.

   [RFC4122]  Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
              Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>.

   [RFC5280]  Cooper, D., Santesson, S., Farrell, S., Boeyen, S.,
              Housley, R., and W. Polk, "Internet X.509 Public Key
              Infrastructure Certificate and Certificate Revocation List
              (CRL) Profile", RFC 5280, DOI 10.17487/RFC5280, May 2008,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5280>.

   [RFC5730]  Hollenbeck, S., "Extensible Provisioning Protocol (EPP)",
              STD 69, RFC 5730, DOI 10.17487/RFC5730, August 2009,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5730>.

   [RFC7343]  Laganier, J. and F. Dupont, "An IPv6 Prefix for Overlay
              Routable Cryptographic Hash Identifiers Version 2
              (ORCHIDv2)", RFC 7343, DOI 10.17487/RFC7343, September
              2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7343>.

   [RFC7401]  Moskowitz, R., Ed., Heer, T., Jokela, P., and T.
              Henderson, "Host Identity Protocol Version 2 (HIPv2)",
              RFC 7401, DOI 10.17487/RFC7401, April 2015,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7401>.

   [RFC7484]  Blanchet, M., "Finding the Authoritative Registration Data
              (RDAP) Service", RFC 7484, DOI 10.17487/RFC7484, March
              2015, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7484>.

   [RFC7519]  Jones, M., Bradley, J., and N. Sakimura, "JSON Web Token
              (JWT)", RFC 7519, DOI 10.17487/RFC7519, May 2015,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7519>.

   [RFC8004]  Laganier, J. and L. Eggert, "Host Identity Protocol (HIP)
              Rendezvous Extension", RFC 8004, DOI 10.17487/RFC8004,
              October 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8004>.

   [RFC8005]  Laganier, J., "Host Identity Protocol (HIP) Domain Name
              System (DNS) Extension", RFC 8005, DOI 10.17487/RFC8005,
              October 2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8005>.

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   [RFC8200]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
              (IPv6) Specification", STD 86, RFC 8200,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC8200, July 2017,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8200>.

   [RFC8392]  Jones, M., Wahlstroem, E., Erdtman, S., and H. Tschofenig,
              "CBOR Web Token (CWT)", RFC 8392, DOI 10.17487/RFC8392,
              May 2018, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8392>.

Appendix A.  EU U-Space RID Privacy Considerations

   EU is defining a future of airspace management known as U-space
   within the Single European Sky ATM Research (SESAR) undertaking.
   Concept of Operation for EuRopean UTM Systems (CORUS) project
   proposed low-level Concept of Operations [corus] for UAS in EU.  It
   introduces strong requirements for UAS privacy based on European GDPR
   regulations.  It suggests that UAs are identified with agnostic IDs,
   with no information about UA type, the operators or flight
   trajectory.  Only authorized persons should be able to query the
   details of the flight with a record of access.

   Due to the high privacy requirements, a casual observer can only
   query U-space if it is aware of a UA seen in a certain area.  A
   general observer can use a public U-space portal to query UA details
   based on the UA transmitted "Remote identification" signal.  Direct
   remote identification (DRID) is based on a signal transmitted by the
   UA directly.  Network remote identification (NRID) is only possible
   for UAs being tracked by U-Space and is based on the matching the
   current UA position to one of the tracks.

   The project lists "E-Identification" and "E-Registrations" services
   as to be developed.  These services can follow the privacy mechanism
   proposed in this document.  If an "agnostic ID" above refers to a
   completely random identifier, it creates a problem with identity
   resolution and detection of misuse.  On the other hand, a classical
   HIT has a flat structure which makes its resolution difficult.  The
   Hierarchical HITs provide a balanced solution by associating a
   registry with the UA identifier.  This is not likely to cause a major
   conflict with U-space privacy requirements, as the registries are
   typically few at a country level (e.g. civil personal, military, law
   enforcement, or commercial).

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Appendix B.  Example HHIT Self Attestation

   This section shows example uses of HHIT RID to prove trustworthiness
   of the RID and attestation of registration to the RAA|HDA.  These are
   examples only and other documents will provide fully specified
   attestations.  Care has been taken in the example design to minimize
   the risk of replay attacks.

   This ownership/attestation of a HHIT can be proved in 84 bytes via
   the following HHIT Self Attestation following [drip-authentication]
   format:

   *  4 byte Signing Timestamp

   *  16 byte HHIT

   *  64 byte Signature (EdDSA25519 signature)

   The Timestamp MAY be the standard UNIX time at the time of signing.
   A protocol specific timestamp may be used to avoid programming
   complexities.  For example, [F3411-19] uses a 00:00:00 01/01/2019
   offset.

   To minimize the risk of replay, the UA SHOULD create a new Self
   Attestation, with a new timestamp, at least once a minute.  The UA
   MAY precompute these attestations and transmit during the appropriate
   1 minute window.  1 minute is chosen as a balance between attestation
   compute time against risk.  A shorter window of use lessens the risk
   of replay.

   The signature is over the 20 byte Timestamp + HHIT.

   The receiver of such an attestation would need access to the
   underlying public key (HI) to validate the signature.  This may be
   obtained via a DNS query using the HHIT.  A larger (116 bytes) Self
   Attestation could include the EdDSA25519 HI.  This larger 116
   attestation allows for signature validation before HHIT lookup to
   prove registration attestation.

B.1.  HHIT Offline Self Attestation

   Ownership and RAA|HDA registration of a HHIT can be proved in 200
   bytes without Internet access and a small cache via the following
   HHIT Offline Self Attestation [drip-authentication] format:

   *  16 byte UA HHIT

   *  32 byte UA EdDSA25519 HI

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   *  4 byte HDA Signing Expiry Timestamp

   *  16 byte HDA HHIT

   *  64 byte HDA Signature (EdDSA25519 signature)

   *  4 byte UA Signing Timestamp

   *  64 byte UA Signature (EdDSA25519 signature)

   The Timestamps MAY be the standard UNIX time at the time of signing.
   A protocol specific timestamp may be used to avoid programming
   complexities.  For example, [F3411-19] uses a 00:00:00 01/01/2019
   offset.

   The HDA signature is over the 68 byte UA HHIT + UA HI + HDA Expiry
   Timestamp + HDA HHIT.  During the UA Registration process, the UA
   would provide a Self Attestation to the HDA.  The HDA would construct
   its attestation of registry with an Expiry Timestamp, its own HHIT,
   and its signature, returning a 132 byte HDA Registry Attestation to
   the UA.  The UA would use this much the same way as its HHIT only in
   the Self Attestation above, creating a 200 byte Offline Self
   Attestation.

   The receiver of such an attestation would need a cache of RAA ID, HDA
   ID, HDA HHIT, and HDA HI (min 80 bytes per RAA/HDA).

Appendix C.  Calculating Collision Probabilities

   The accepted formula for calculating the probability of a collision
   is:

       p = 1 - e^{-k^2/(2n)}

       P   Collision Probability
       n   Total possible population
       k   Actual population

   The following table provides the approximate population size for a
   collision for a given total population.

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                          Deployed Population
        Total            With Collision Risk of
        Population         .01%            1%

        2^96                 4T           42T
        2^72                 1B           10B
        2^68               250M          2.5B
        2^64                66M          663M
        2^60                16M          160M

Acknowledgments

   Dr. Gurtov is an adviser on Cybersecurity to the Swedish Civil
   Aviation Administration.

   Quynh Dang of NIST gave considerable guidance on using Keccak and the
   NIST supporting documents.  Joan Deamen of the Keccak team was
   especially helpful in many aspects of using Keccak.

Authors' Addresses

   Robert Moskowitz
   HTT Consulting
   Oak Park, MI 48237
   United States of America

   Email: rgm@labs.htt-consult.com

   Stuart W. Card
   AX Enterprize, LLC
   4947 Commercial Drive
   Yorkville, NY 13495
   United States of America

   Email: stu.card@axenterprize.com

   Adam Wiethuechter
   AX Enterprize, LLC
   4947 Commercial Drive
   Yorkville, NY 13495
   United States of America

   Email: adam.wiethuechter@axenterprize.com

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   Andrei Gurtov
   Linköping University
   IDA
   SE-58183 Linköping
   Sweden

   Email: gurtov@acm.org

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