doc.: ieee 802.11-04/751r0 submission july 2004 max riegel, siemensslide 1 selling network access...
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July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 1
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Selling network accessViews from a business perspective
Max Riegel
Siemens
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 2
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
ConventionCenter
Airport
Railway Station
Campus
HotelHospital
Serving WLAN customers in public hot spots...
...often means selling network access in a competive environment.
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 3
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
N
Portal based access control also known as UAM
auth
IP Config (DHCP)
Internet
HLR
AAA
3GPPMNO
AccessController
WirelessIntegrationPlatform
AAACRMBilling
PortalServer
auth
html
RADIUSclient
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 4
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Portal based access control – not everybody’s darling!
• Portal based access control for public WLAN has been specified within the WiFi Alliance WISPr 1.0 Recommendation– Establish a common look-and-feel of the portal based access control.
• Portal based access control is currently used by all commercial public hotspots
• People in standardization depreciate the usage of UAM due to– No 2G/3G-like automatic network association– SIM support complicated– WLAN link unsecured
• weak mutual authentication, no over-the-air encryption, session hijacking– Browser redirect does not always work
• IEEE802.1X/EAP (Extensible Authentication Protocol) is seen as the best solution for public access.– has been adopted by IEEE802.11i
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 5
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
IEEE802.11i adds EAP and data encryption into the WLAN access procedure
Internet
Association
Access to service
IP-Configuration (DHCP)
Authorization
EAP Identity RequestEAP Identity Response
EAP RequestEAP ResponseEAP Success
Access RequestAccess Challenge
Access RequestAccess Accept
AuthenticationServer
Key ManagementData Encryption
Master-Key distribution
ExtensibleAuthenticationProtocol
IEE
E8
02
.11
i
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 6
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Public WLAN access with 802.11i/EAP fixes the bugs but creates new issues
• 802.11i/EAP solves the issues for– 2G/3G-like automatic network association w/ SIM– Secured WLAN connection
... but creates new issues:• Network Discovery and Selection Problem
– details see: draft-ietf-eap-netsel-problem-00.txt– Access network discovery, identifier selection, AAA routing, payload
routing; or: Discovery, Decision, and Selection
• User interaction and help in the case something goes wrong• Support for more sophisticated business models, e.g.
– Selection of different services during a particular session– Anonymous services, e.g. enrollment support
... issues which are well supported by the UAM!
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 7
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Portal based access control is like a ‘Mall’
• Open anonymous access
• Very attractive and flexible to the customer
• ‘Have fun, but it may take time’
Two approaches for selling (access)802.11i/EAP is like a ‘Vending machine’
• Put in the right coin, push the button and you are done.
• If something fails,you are lost.
• ‘Dont ask
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 8
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Combining EAP and UAM
• Both 802.11i/EAP as well as UAM are valuable approaches– 802.11i/EAP for the experienced, repeating user– UAM for the ‘beginner’ and for exception cases
• Combining EAP & UAM is currently not possible.Why?
Link establishment
User authentication
User security context
IP-Configuration (DHCP)
User authorization
Access to service
Establishment ofcommunication channel
Verification ofuser credentials
No communication channelavailable prior to successfuluser authentication.
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 9
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Traditional 802.11i/EAP
Link establishment
User authentication
User security context
IP-Configuration (DHCP)
User authorization
Access to service
Unified access scheme
Link establishment
User authentication
Anonymous security context
IP-Configuration (DHCP)
Default authorization
Access to service
User authorizationNegotiation
o.k.
An unified approach for network access control
July 2004
Max Riegel, Siemens
Slide 10
doc.: IEEE 802.11-04/751r0
Submission
Conclusion
• UAM as well as EAP are valuable solutions for access control.• ‘Secured’ UAM is currently not possible.• An anonymous secured media-rich communication channel is
needed before user authentication and authorization.• There are several potential solutions for delayed authentication:
– Enhanced EAP methods – Smart client based on https (see WISPr)– Layer-3 authentication protocol (PANA)
• Most urgent for public WLAN access, but may lead to a general solution later.
• Should become a topic in IEEE802.11 WIEN
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