%% You should probably cite draft-ietf-rats-eat-25 instead of this revision. @techreport{ietf-rats-eat-13, number = {draft-ietf-rats-eat-13}, type = {Internet-Draft}, institution = {Internet Engineering Task Force}, publisher = {Internet Engineering Task Force}, note = {Work in Progress}, url = {https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-rats-eat/13/}, author = {Laurence Lundblade and Giridhar Mandyam and Jeremy O'Donoghue}, title = {{The Entity Attestation Token (EAT)}}, pagetotal = 106, year = 2022, month = may, day = 20, abstract = {An Entity Attestation Token (EAT) provides an attested claims set that describes state and characteristics of an entity, a device like a phone, IoT device, network equipment or such. This claims set is used by a relying party, server or service to determine how much it wishes to trust the entity. An EAT is either a CBOR Web Token (CWT) or JSON Web Token (JWT) with attestation-oriented claims. To a large degree, all this document does is extend CWT and JWT.}, }