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The Entity Attestation Token (EAT)
draft-ietf-rats-eat-03

The information below is for an old version of the document.
Document Type Expired Internet-Draft (rats WG)
Authors Giridhar Mandyam , Laurence Lundblade , Miguel Ballesteros , Jeremy O'Donoghue
Last updated 2020-08-23 (Latest revision 2020-02-20)
Replaces draft-mandyam-rats-eat
Stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
Formats
Expired & archived
plain text xml pdf htmlized pdfized bibtex
Stream WG state WG Document
Associated WG milestones
Mar 2019
Call for adoption on EAT draft.
Jul 2022
Submit EAT draft to IESG for publication
Document shepherd (None)
IESG IESG state Expired
Consensus boilerplate Unknown
Telechat date (None)
Responsible AD (None)
Send notices to (None)
This Internet-Draft is no longer active. A copy of the expired Internet-Draft can be found at:
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-rats-eat-03.txt

Abstract

An Entity Attestation Token (EAT) provides a signed (attested) set of claims that describe state and characteristics of an entity, typically a device like a phone or an IoT device. These claims are used by a relying party to determine how much it wishes to trust the entity. An EAT is either a CWT or JWT with some attestation-oriented claims. To a large degree, all this document does is extend CWT and JWT. Contributing TBD

Authors

Giridhar Mandyam
Laurence Lundblade
Miguel Ballesteros
Jeremy O'Donoghue

(Note: The e-mail addresses provided for the authors of this Internet-Draft may no longer be valid.)