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  • Suggested IETF 117 Sessions for Getting Familiar with New Topics

    These IETF 117 meeting sessions are likely to include discussions and proposals that are accessible to a broad range of Internet technologists whether they are new to the IETF or long-time participants.

      7 Jul 2023
    • BPF: taking work to the IETF

      The new BPF Working Group is beginning work to document the state of the ecosystem and extensions for this technology that has origins in the Linux kernel and is increasingly being used beyond Linux.

      • David VernetBPF Working Group Co-chair
      • Suresh KrishnanBPF Working Group Co-chair
      5 Jul 2023
    • Report from the 2023 IAB and IESG retreat

      The Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) and Internet Architecture Board (IAB) held their annual retreat in Seattle on 8-12 May, with two days for each group and a joint day in the middle.

      • Mirja KühlewindIAB Chair
      29 Jun 2023
    • Supporting Running Code at the IETF

      The IETF’s “running code” mantra is a distinguishing characteristic of how the IETF works, which is why Ericsson has made a three year commitment to supporting events like the IETF Hackathon.

      • Gonzalo CamarilloHead of Implementation Components at Ericsson
      21 Jun 2023
    • IETF 116 Highlights and other thoughts

      Mirja Kühlewind reports on a few highlights and some personal impressions from the IETF 116 Yokohama meeting held 25-31 March 2023.

      • Mirja KühlewindIESG Member
      7 Jun 2023

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    WebRTC: Marking a milestone in real-time communications

    • Alissa CooperIETF Chair

    27 Jan 2021

    The publication of the standards that provide a foundation for Web Real-Time Communications (WebRTC) marks a milestone in the development of conferencing services used by billions of people around the world.

    More than a decade ago, when rich web applications were in their infancy, engineers from across the web and real-time communications industries came together to tackle a challenging problem: could modern voice and video over IP technology be brought to the ubiquitous platform of the Web?

    The task was daunting. Real-time communications involved complicated protocol mechanics and network address translation (NAT) traversal machinery, while the Web lacked the APIs and security model needed to safely effectuate two-way real-time communications. But the idea of being able to make a video call in your browser at the click of a button presented nearly limitless possibilities for collaboration, connection, and productivity. 

    That idea has become a reality for billions of users around the world thanks to years of intensive work to standardize WebRTC in the IETF and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Last week, the IETF published a set of 50 specifications (comprising the bulk of RFCs published in January) that define the core WebRTC protocol stack together with several other protocols that use WebRTC building blocks. Earlier this week, the W3C published WebRTC 1.0, the web APIs that makes browser-to-browser calls possible. Even prior to the finalization of these specifications—years prior, in fact—WebRTC technologies were being deployed and used as part of most modern services that use voice or video, including many that do not involve web browsers. The availability of WebRTC code, APIs, and standards has made it simple to add real-time communications functionality to any application. And that widespread availability has been a true lifeline during the COVID-19 pandemic.  

    There is already work underway to extend WebRTC. The IETF WebTransport (WEBTRANS) work is aiming to build out additional web support for a variety of transport properties. The WebRTC Ingest Signaling over HTTPS (WISH) work is focusing on the development of a protocol to support one-way WebRTC-based audiovisual sessions between broadcasting tools and real-time media broadcast networks. Similar work to expand the use cases of WebRTC is ongoing in the W3C.

    Finishing the core WebRTC standards required tremendous effort from dozens of IETF and W3C participants over many years. The end result is a hugely popular technology suite that fulfills the Internet’s central promise—connecting people—on a global scale every day. It will be exciting to see what the future holds as the IETF community continues to build on this success.


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