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rfc:rfc7245

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Hutton, Ed. Request for Comments: 7245 Unify Category: Informational L. Portman, Ed. ISSN: 2070-1721 NICE Systems

                                                               R. Jain
                                                           IPC Systems
                                                              K. Rehor
                                                   Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                              May 2014
                An Architecture for Media Recording
               Using the Session Initiation Protocol

Abstract

 Session recording is a critical requirement in many communications
 environments such as call centers and financial trading.  In some of
 these environments, all calls must be recorded for regulatory,
 compliance, and consumer protection reasons.  Recording of a session
 is typically performed by sending a copy of a media stream to a
 recording device.  This document describes architectures for
 deploying session recording solutions in an environment that is based
 on the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP).

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7245.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 1] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://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.  Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 3.  Session Recording Architecture  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   3.1.  Location of the SRC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     3.1.1.  B2BUA Acts as a SRC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     3.1.2.  Endpoint Acts as SRC  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
     3.1.3.  A SIP Proxy Cannot Be a SRC . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     3.1.4.  Interaction with MEDIACTRL  . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     3.1.5.  Interaction with Conference Focus . . . . . . . . . .   9
   3.2.  Establishing the Recording Session  . . . . . . . . . . .  10
     3.2.1.  SRC-Initiated Recording . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     3.2.2.  SRS-Initiated Recording . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     3.2.3.  Pause/Resume Recording Session  . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     3.2.4.  Media Stream Mixing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     3.2.5.  Media Transcoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
     3.2.6.  Lossless Recording  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   3.3.  Recording Metadata  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     3.3.1.  Contents of Recording Metadata  . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     3.3.2.  Mechanisms for Delivery of Metadata to SRS  . . . . .  13
   3.4.  Notifications to the Recorded User Agents . . . . . . . .  13
   3.5.  Preventing the Recording of a SIP Session . . . . . . . .  13
 4.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
 5.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
 6.  Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
 7.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 2] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

1. Introduction

 Session recording is a critical requirement in many communications
 environments such as call centers and financial trading.  In some of
 these environments, all calls must be recorded for regulatory,
 compliance, and consumer protection reasons.  Recording of a session
 is typically performed by sending a copy of a media stream to a
 recording device.  This document describes architectures for
 deploying session recording solutions as defined in "Use Cases and
 Requirements for SIP-Based Media Recording (SIPREC)" [RFC6341].
 This document focuses on how sessions are established between a
 Session Recording Client (SRC) and the Session Recording Server (SRS)
 for the purpose of conveying the Replicated Media and Recording
 Metadata (e.g., identity of the parties involved) relating to the
 Communication Session.
 Once the Replicated Media and Recording Metadata have been received
 by the SRS, they will typically be archived for retrieval at a later
 time.  The procedures relating to the archiving and retrieval of this
 information are outside the scope of this document.
 This document only considers active recording, where the SRC
 purposefully streams media to a SRS.  Passive recording, where a
 recording device detects media directly from the network (e.g., using
 port-mirroring techniques), is outside the scope of this document.
 In addition, lawful intercept is outside the scope of this document,
 which takes account of the IETF policy on wiretapping [RFC2804].
 The Recording Session that is established between the SRC and the SRS
 uses the normal procedures for establishing INVITE-initiated dialogs
 as specified in [RFC3261] and uses the Session Description Protocol
 (SDP) for describing the media to be used during the session as
 specified in [RFC4566].  However, it is intended that some extensions
 to SIP (e.g., Headers, Option Tags, etc.) will be defined to support
 the requirements for media recording.  The Replicated Media is
 required to be sent in real-time to the SRS and is not buffered by
 the SRC to allow for real-time analysis of the media by the SRS.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 3] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

2. Definitions

 The first four definitions are quoted from RFC 6341.
 Session Recording Server (SRS):  A Session Recording Server (SRS) is
    a SIP User Agent (UA) that is a specialized media server or
    collector that acts as the sink of the recorded media.  An SRS is
    typically implemented as a multi-port device that is capable of
    receiving media from multiple sources simultaneously.  An SRS is
    the sink of the recorded session metadata.
 Session Recording Client (SRC):  A Session Recording Client (SRC) is
    a SIP User Agent (UA) that acts as the source of the recorded
    media, sending it to the SRS.  An SRC is a logical function.  Its
    capabilities may be implemented across one or more physical
    devices.  In practice, an SRC could be a personal device (such as
    a SIP phone), a SIP Media Gateway (MG), a Session Border
    Controller (SBC), or a SIP Media Server (MS) integrated with an
    Application Server (AS).  This specification defines the term
    "SRC" such that all such SIP entities can be generically addressed
    under one definition.  The SRC provides metadata to the SRS.
 Communication Session (CS):  A session created between two or more
    SIP User Agents (UAs) that is the subject of recording.
 Recording Session (RS):  The SIP session created between an SRC and
    SRS for the purpose of recording a CS.
 The following terms are defined by this document.
 Recording-aware User Agent (UA):  A SIP User Agent that is aware of
    SIP extensions associated with the CS.  Such extensions may be
    used to notify the recording-aware UA that a session is being
    recorded, or by a recording-aware UA to express preferences as to
    whether a recording should be started, paused, resumed, or
    stopped.
 Recording-unaware User Agent (UA):  A SIP User Agent that is unaware
    of SIP extensions associated with the CS.  Such a recording-
    unaware UA will be notified that a session is being recorded or
    will express preferences as to whether a recording should be
    started, paused, resumed, or stopped via some other means that is
    out of scope for the SIP media recording architecture.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 4] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

 Recording Metadata:  The metadata describing the CS that is required
    by the SRS.  This will include, for example, the identities of
    users that participate in the CS and dialog state.  Typically,
    this metadata is archived with the Replicated Media at the SRS.
    The recording metadata is delivered in real-time to the SRS.
 Replicated Media:  A copy of the media that is associated with the
    CS, was created by the SRC, and was sent to the SRS.  It may
    contain all the media associated with the CS (e.g., audio and
    video) or just a subset (e.g., audio).  Replicated Media is part
    of the Recording Session.

3. Session Recording Architecture

3.1. Location of the SRC

 This section contains some example session recording architectures
 showing how the SRC is a logical function that can be located in or
 split between various physical components.

3.1.1. B2BUA Acts as a SRC

 A SIP Back-to-Back User Agent (B2BUA) that has access to the media to
 be recorded may act as an SRC.  The B2BUA may already be aware that a
 session needs to be recorded before the initial establishment of the
 CS, or the decision to record the session may occur after the session
 has been established.
 If the SRC makes the decision to initiate the RS, then it will do so
 by sending a SIP INVITE request to the SRS.
 If the SRS makes the decision to initiate the Recording Session, then
 it will initiate the establishment of a SIP RS by sending an INVITE
 to the SRC.
 The RS INVITE contains information that identifies the session as
 being established for the purposes of recording and prevents the
 session from being accidentally rerouted to a UA that is not an SRS
 if the RS was initiated by the SRC or vice versa.
 The B2BUA/SRC is responsible for notifying the UAs involved in the CS
 that the session is being recorded.
 The B2BUA/SRC is responsible for complying with requests from
 recording aware UAs or through some configured policies indicating
 that the CS should not be recorded.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 5] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

                                            +-----------+
                        (Recording Session) |  Session  |
                           +------SIP------>| Recording |
                           |                |  Server   |
                           |  +--RTP/RTCP-->|  (SRS)    |
                           |  |             +-----------+
                           V  V                   ^
                      +-------------+             |
                      |             |             |
                      |             |-- Metadata -+
                      |             |
                      |    B2BUA    |
                      |             |
                      |   Session   |
   +--------+         |  Recording  |         +---------+
   |        |<- SIP ->|   Client    |<- SIP ->|         |
   |  UA-A  |         |   (SRC)     |         |  UA-B   |
   |        |<- RTP/->|             |<- RTP/->|         |
   +--------+   RTCP  |             |   RTCP  +---------+
                      +-------------+
   |____________________________________________________|
                  (Communication Session)
         Figure 1: B2BUA Acts as the Session Recording Client

3.1.2. Endpoint Acts as SRC

 A SIP endpoint / UA may act as a SRC.  In that case, the endpoint
 sends the Replicated Media to the SRS.
 If the endpoint makes the decision to initiate the Recording Session,
 then it will initiate the establishment of a SIP Session by sending
 an INVITE to the SRS.
 If the SRS makes the decision to initiate the Recording Session, then
 it will initiate the establishment of a SIP Session by sending an
 INVITE to the endpoint.  The actual decision mechanism is out of
 scope for the SIP media recording architecture.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 6] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

        (Recording Session) +-----------+
       +----------SIP------>|           |
       |  +----RTP/RTCP---->|  Session  |
       |  |                 | Recording |
       |  |                 |  Server   |
       |  | +-- Metadata -->|   (SRS)   |
       |  | |               |           |
       |  | |               +-----------+
       |  | |
       |  | |
       |  | |
       |  | |
       V  V |  (Communication Session)
    +--+------+                     +---------+
    |         |<-------SIP--------->|         |
    |  UA-A   |                     |  UA-B   |
    |  (SRC)  |<-----RTP/RTCP------>|         |
    +---------+                     +---------+
      Figure 2: SIP Endpoint Acts as the Session Recording Client

3.1.3. A SIP Proxy Cannot Be a SRC

 A SIP Proxy is unable to act as an SRC because it does not have
 access to the media and therefore has no way of enabling the delivery
 of the Replicated Media to the SRS.

3.1.4. Interaction with MEDIACTRL

 The MEDIACTRL architecture [RFC5567] describes an architecture in
 which an Application Server (AS) controls a Media Server (MS), which
 may be used for purposes such as conferencing and recording media
 streams.  In the architecture described in [RFC5567], the AS
 typically uses SIP Third Party Call Control (3PCC) to instruct the
 SIP UAs to direct their media to the Media Server.
 The SRC or the SRS described in this document may be architected
 according to [RFC5567]; therefore, when further decomposed, they may
 be made up of an AS that uses a MEDIACTRL interface to control an MS.
 As shown in Figure 3, when the SRS is architected according to
 [RFC5567], the MS acts as a sink of the recording media, and the AS
 acts as a sink of the metadata and the termination point for RS SIP
 signaling.  As shown in Figure 4, when the SRC is architected
 according to [RFC5567], the MS acts as a source of recording media,
 and the AS acts as a source of the metadata and the termination point
 for RS SIP signaling.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 7] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

                                   Session Recording Server (SRS)
                            +----------------------------------------+
                            |                                        |
        (Recording Session) |  +-----------+          +------------+ |
        +------------SIP----|->|           |          |            | |
        |                   |  | MEDIACTRL |MEDIACTRL |   Media    | |
        |                   |  |Application|<-------->|   Server   | |
        |    +-----Metadata--->|  Server   |          |  (Recorder)| |
        |    |              |  |           |          |            | |
        |    |              |  +-----------+          +------------+ |
        |    |              |                              ^         |
        |    |              +------------------------------|---------+
        |    |  +--------------- RTP/RTCP -----------------+
        |    |  |
        V    |  V
      +---+------+                          +---------+
      |          |<-------SIP-------------->|         |
      |   UA-A   | (Communication Session)  |  UA-B   |
      |   (SRC)  |<-------RTP/RTCP--------->|         |
      +----------+                          +---------+
     Figure 3: Example of Session Recording Server using MEDIACTRL
                                                  +----------+
               (Recording Session)                | Session  |
         +-----------SIP------------------------->|Recording |
         | +----------Metadata------------------->|  Server  |
         | |                                      |   (SRS)  |
         V | UA-A Session Recording Client (SRC)  +----------+
  +----------------------------------------+         ^
  |                                        |         |
  |  +-----------+          +------------+ |         |
  |  |           | Control  |            |<-RTP/RTCP-+    +---------+
  |  |    UA     | Protocol |   Media    | |              |         |
  |  |Application|<-------->|  Server    | |<----SIP----->|  UA-B   |
  |  |  Server   |          |            |<-----RTP------>|         |
  |  |           |          |            | |              +---------+
  |  +-----------+          +------------+ |
  |                                        |
  +----------------------------------------+
      Figure 4: Example of Session Recording Client Decomposition

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 8] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

3.1.5. Interaction with Conference Focus

 In the case of a centralized conference, a combination of the
 conference focus and mixer [RFC4353] may act as a SRC and therefore
 provide the SRS with the Replicated Media and associated recording
 metadata.  In this arrangement, the SRC is able to provide media and
 metadata relating to each of the participants, including, for
 example, any side conversations where the media passes through the
 mixer.
 The conference focus can either provide mixed Replicated Media or
 separate streams per conference participant (as depicted in
 Figure 5).
 The conference focus may also act as a recording-aware UA in the case
 when one of the participants acts as a SRC.
 In an alternative arrangement, a SIP endpoint that is a conference
 participant can act as an SRC.  The SRC will in this case have access
 to the media and metadata relating to that particular participant and
 may be able to obtain additional metadata from the conference focus.
 The SRC may, for example, use the conference event package as
 described in [RFC4575] to obtain information about other participants
 that it provides to the SRS within the recording metadata.
 The SRC may be involved in the conference from the very beginning or
 may join at some later point of time.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 9] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

                              User 1
                          +-----------+
                          |           |
                          |           |
                          |Participant|
                          |     1     |
                          |           |
                          +-----------+
                              ^ ^SIP
                          RTP | |Dialog
                              | |1
     User 2                   V V       Recording
  +-----------+           +-----------+  Session     *************
  |           |           |           |<------------>*           *
  |           |<-- RTP -->|           |<-RTP/RTCP 1->*           *
  |Participant|<--------->| Focus/SRC |<-RTP/RTCP 2->*    SRS    *
  |     2     |  SIP      |           |<-RTP/RTCP 3->*           *
  |           |  Dialog   |           |              *           *
  +-----------+  2        +-----------+              *************
                               ^ ^
                               | |SIP
                           RTP | |Dialog
                               | |3
                               V V
                          +-----------+
                          |           |
                          |           |
                          |Participant|
                          |    3      |
                          |           |
                          +-----------+
                             User 3
              Figure 5: Conference Focus Acting as an SRC

3.2. Establishing the Recording Session

 The SRC or the SRS may initiate the Recording Session.
 It should be noted that the Recording Session is independent from the
 CS that is being recorded at both the SIP dialog level and at the
 session level.
 Concerning media negotiation, regular SIP/SDP capabilities should be
 used, and existing transcoding capabilities and media encryption
 should not be precluded.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 10] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

3.2.1. SRC-Initiated Recording

 When the SRC initiates the Recording Session for the purpose of
 conveying media to the SRS, it performs the following actions:
 o  Is provisioned with a Unified Resource Identifier (URI) for the
    SRS; the URI is resolved through normal [RFC3263] procedures.
 o  Initiates the dialog by sending an INVITE request to the SRS.  The
    dialog is established according to the normal procedures for
    establishing an INVITE-initiated dialog as specified in [RFC3261].
 o  Includes in the INVITE an indication that the session is
    established for the purpose of recording the associated media.
 o  Includes an SDP attribute of "a=sendonly" for each media line if
    the Replicated Media is to be started immediately, or includes
    "a=inactive" if it is not ready to transmit the media.
 o  Replicates the media streams that are to be recorded and transmits
    the media to the SRS.
 The Recording Session may replicate all media associated with the CS
 or only a subset.

3.2.2. SRS-Initiated Recording

 When the SRS initiates the media Recording Session with the SRC, it
 performs the following actions:
 o  Is provisioned with a Unified Resource Identifier (URI) for the
    SRC; the URI is resolved through normal [RFC3263] procedures.
 o  Sends an INVITE request to the SRC.
 o  Includes in the INVITE an indication that the session is
    established for the purpose of recording the associated media.
 o  Identifies the sessions that are to be recorded.  The actual
    mechanism of the identification depends on SRC policy.
 o  Includes an SDP attribute of "a=recvonly" for each media line if
    the Recording Session is to be started immediately, or includes
    "a=inactive" if it is not ready to receive the media.
 If the SRS does not have prior knowledge of what media streams are
 available to be recorded, it can make use of an offerless INVITE,
 which allows the SRC to make the initial SDP offer.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 11] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

3.2.3. Pause/Resume Recording Session

 The SRS or the SRC may pause the recording by changing the SDP
 direction attribute to "inactive" and resume the recording by
 changing the direction back to "recvonly" or "sendonly".

3.2.4. Media Stream Mixing

 In a basic session involving only audio, there are typically two
 audio/RTP streams between the two UAs involved in transporting media
 in each direction.  When recording this media, the two streams may be
 mixed or not mixed at the SRC before being transmitted to the SRS.
 In the case when they are not mixed, two separate streams are sent to
 the SRS, and the SDP offer sent to the SRS must describe two separate
 media streams.  In the mixed case, a single mixed media stream is
 sent to the SRS.

3.2.5. Media Transcoding

 The CS and the RS are negotiated separately using the standard SDP
 offer/answer exchange which may result in the SRC having to perform
 media transcoding between the two sessions.  If the SRC is not
 capable of performing media transcoding it may limit the media
 formats in the offer to the SRS depending on what media is negotiated
 on the CS or may limit what it includes in the offer on the CS if it
 has prior knowledge of the media formats supported by the SRS.
 However typically the SRS will be a more capable device which can
 provide a wide range of media format options to the SRC and may also
 be able to make use of a media transcoder as detailed in [RFC5369].

3.2.6. Lossless Recording

 Session recording may be a regulatory requirement in certain
 communication environments.  Such environments may impose a
 requirement generally known as "lossless recording".  An overall
 solution for lossless recording may involve multiple layers of
 solutions.  Individual aspects of the solutions may range from
 administering networks for appropriate QoS, reliable transmission of
 recorded media, and perhaps certain SIPREC protocol-level
 capabilities in SRC and SRS.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 12] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

3.3. Recording Metadata

3.3.1. Contents of Recording Metadata

 The metadata model is defined in [REC-METADATA].

3.3.2. Mechanisms for Delivery of Metadata to SRS

 The SRS obtains session recording metadata from the SRC.  The
 metadata is transported via SIP-based mechanisms as specified in
 [REC-PROTOCOL]
 It is also possible that metadata is transported via non-SIP-based
 mechanisms, but these are considered out of scope.
 It is also possible to have an RS session without the metadata; in
 that case, the SRS will be receiving the metadata by some other means
 or not at all.

3.4. Notifications to the Recorded User Agents

 Typically, a user that is involved in a session that is to be
 recorded is notified by an announcement at the beginning of the
 session or may receive some warning tones within the media.  However,
 SIPREC enables an indication that the call is being recorded to be
 included in the SIP requests and responses associated with that CS.
 The SRC provides the notification to all SIP UAs for which it is
 replicating received media for the purpose of recording.  If the SRC
 is acting as a SIP endpoint, as described in Section 3.1.2, then it
 also provides a notification to the local user.

3.5. Preventing the Recording of a SIP Session

 During the initial session establishment or during an established
 session, a recording-aware UA may provide an indication of its
 preference with regard to recording the media in the CS.  The
 mechanisms for this are specified in [REC-PROTOCOL]

4. IANA Considerations

 This document has no actions for IANA.  This document mentions
 SIP/SDP extensions.  The associated IANA considerations are addressed
 in [REC-PROTOCOL], which defines them.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 13] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

5. Security Considerations

 The Recording Session is fundamentally a standard SIP dialog and
 media session and therefore makes use of existing SIP security
 mechanisms for securing the Recording Session and Recording Metadata.
 The intended use of this architecture is only for the case where the
 users are aware that they are being recorded, and the architecture
 provides the means for the SRC to notify users that they are being
 recorded.
 This architectural solution is not intended to support lawful
 intercept, which in contrast requires that users are not informed.
 It is the responsibility of the SRS to protect the Replicated Media
 and Recording Metadata once it has been received and archived.  The
 stored content must be protected using a cipher at least as strong
 (or stronger) than the original content; however, the mechanism for
 protecting the storage and retrieval from the SRS is out of scope of
 this work.  The keys used to store the data must also be securely
 maintained by the SRS and should only be released, securely, to
 authorized parties.  How to secure these keys, properly authorize a
 receiving party, or securely distribute the keying material is also
 out of scope of this work.
 Protection of the RS should not be weaker than protection of the CS
 and may need to be stronger because the media is retransmitted
 (allowing more possibility for interception).  This applies to both
 the signaling and media paths.
 It is essential that the SRC will authenticate the SRS because the
 client must be certain that it is recording on the right recording
 system.  It is less important that the SRS authenticate the SRC, but
 implementations must have the ability to perform mutual
 authentication.
 In some environments, it is desirable to not decrypt and re-encrypt
 the media.  This means the same media encryption key is negotiated
 and used within the CS and RS.  If for any reason the media are
 decrypted on the CS and are re-encrypted on the RS, a new key must be
 used.
 The retrieval mechanism for media recorded by this protocol is out of
 scope.  Implementations of retrieval mechanisms should consider the
 security implications carefully, as the retriever is not usually a
 party to the call that was recorded.  Retrievers should be
 authenticated carefully.  The cryptosuites on the retrieval should be
 no less strong than those used on the RS and may need to be stronger.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 14] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

6. Acknowledgements

 Thanks to John Elwell, Brian Rosen, Alan Johnson, Cullen Jennings,
 Hadriel Kaplan, Henry Lum, Paul Kyzivat, Parthasarathi R., Ram Mohan
 R., Charles Eckel, Friso Feenstra, and Dave Higton for their
 significant contributions and assistance with this document and
 working group.  Also, thanks to all the members of the SIPREC WG
 mailing list for providing valuable input to this work.

7. Informative References

 [RFC3261]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston,
            A., Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.
            Schooler, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261,
            June 2002.
 [RFC3263]  Rosenberg, J. and H. Schulzrinne, "Session Initiation
            Protocol (SIP): Locating SIP Servers", RFC 3263, June
            2002.
 [RFC4566]  Handley, M., Jacobson, V., and C. Perkins, "SDP: Session
            Description Protocol", RFC 4566, July 2006.
 [RFC6341]  Rehor, K., Portman, L., Hutton, A., and R. Jain, "Use
            Cases and Requirements for SIP-Based Media Recording
            (SIPREC)", RFC 6341, August 2011.
 [REC-METADATA]
            Ravindranath, R., Ravindran, P., and P. Kyzivat, "Session
            Initiation Protocol (SIP) Recording Metadata", Work in
            Progress, February 2014.
 [REC-PROTOCOL]
            Portman, L., Lum, H., Eckel, C., Johnston, A., and A.
            Hutton, "Session Recording Protocol", Work in Progress,
            February 2014.
 [RFC4353]  Rosenberg, J., "A Framework for Conferencing with the
            Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 4353, February
            2006.
 [RFC4575]  Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., and O. Levin, "A Session
            Initiation Protocol (SIP) Event Package for Conference
            State", RFC 4575, August 2006.
 [RFC5567]  Melanchuk, T., "An Architectural Framework for Media
            Server Control", RFC 5567, June 2009.

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 15] RFC 7245 Architecture for Media Recording May 2014

 [RFC5369]  Camarillo, G., "Framework for Transcoding with the Session
            Initiation Protocol (SIP)", RFC 5369, October 2008.
 [RFC2804]  IAB and IESG, "IETF Policy on Wiretapping", RFC 2804, May
            2000.

Authors' Addresses

 Andrew Hutton (editor)
 Unify
 Hofmannstrasse 51
 81359 Munich
 Germany
 EMail: andrew.hutton@unify.com
 Leon Portman (editor)
 NICE Systems
 8 Hapnina
 Ra'anana  43017
 Israel
 EMail: leon.portman@gmail.com
 Rajnish Jain
 IPC Systems
 777 Commerce Drive
 Fairfield, CT  06825
 USA
 EMail: rajnish.jain@outlook.com
 Ken Rehor
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 170 West Tasman Drive
 San Jose, CA  95134-1706
 USA
 EMail: krehor@cisco.com

Hutton, et al. Informational [Page 16]

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