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 adds binding extensions to the WebDAV. Binding extensions seem to be like hard links on unix file system i.e. providing multiple bindings for same resource (and resource is freed only when the last binding goes away). Security considerations section refers to the "HTTP/1.1 and the WebDAV Distributed Authoring Protocol specification" and says that all security considerations of them also applies to this document, but it does not give explicit references to the documents containing those security considerations. Bindings adds some new security concerns (privacy, loops, denial of service etc.), and those issues seem to be adequately covered by the security considerations section. One of the things I am not sure if it is really applicable here, but which is not covered by the security considerations section is that bindings might confuse administrator about access permissions. I.e. even when administrator revokes all change permissions from certain collection (i.e the user cannot change the data any more), if that collection has binding pointing to some other collection or resource where user still has permissions, the user might still be able to change resources in the first collection even when administrator believes he already removed permissions. I am not familiar enough with the WebDAV authorization model to know if this kind of attacks are possible or not, i.e. I do not know if the permissions are set per resource basis or for per collection or what. -- kivinen at iki.fi