I have reviewed this document as part of the security directorate's ongoing effort to review all IETF documents being processed by the IESG. These comments were written primarily for the benefit of the security area directors. Document editors and WG chairs should treat these comments just like any other last-call comments. This document extends the Manufacturer Usage Description specification to incorporate the (D)TLS profile parameters for a network security service to identify unexpected (D)TLS usage. The document has very good description of common malware behavior that is informative. Questions - Are the profile on the remote IoT device or on the network device? If the profile is on remote IoT devices, are those attributes in the profiles attached as metadata when requesting TLS connections? Are those attributes encrypted? - If the Malware on IoT doesn't participate in TLS, can those MUD be used to detect the Malware on the remote IoT devices? - Page 6, first paragraph says: "malware developers will have to develop malicious agents per IoT device type, manufacturer and model, infect the device with the tailored malware agent and will have keep up with updates to the device's (D)TLS profile parameters over time." Does it mean that if all the IoT devices deployed in the network register their DeviceType/ManufacturerName/Model with the network services, then the network services can validate the TLS requests from the IoT? - Section 3 last paragraph says that "compromised IoT devices are typically used for launching DDoS attacks". Can today's TLS re-negotiation validate the TLS requests by evaluating if the server certificates are signed by the same certifying authorities trusted by the IoT device"? Thank you very much, Linda Dunbar