Title: Emergency Services ECC TRIS Vienna, July 2004
1Emergency ServicesECC TRISVienna, July 2004
The opinions expressed here may or may not be
that of my company
2Introduction
- The discussion in Europe on the treatment of
Emergency Services with VoIP started - with the Analysys Report to the EC, regarding
access to ES and PATS - the activities in the US between IETF, NENA and
the VON Coalition - One of the major issues is the provision of
location information of the caller to be used for
call routing and also to be displayed at the
PSAP. - On the other hand a lot has been undertaken
already in Europe, US and Japan to provide
enhanced location information to PSAPs for calls
from mobile phones - Many solutions proposed and implemented could be
re-used also for calls from VoIP.
3Content
- Regulatory Status in Europe
- Basic Emergency Call Problems
- Work at IETF
- Major topics
- Emergency Services Obligations
- Proposal for a staged approach
4EU Position on Emergency Services
- Access to Emergency services is extremely
important for citizens, irrespective of how a
telephone service may be classified for legal and
regulatory purposes. - The Universal Service Directive has an explicit
requirement that access to emergency services has
to be offered by providers of PATS, but there is
no similarly explicit obligation for providers of
ECS who may be offering a telephone service. - From a public policy point of view it is
desirable that access to emergency services is
available from as wide a range of electronic
communications services as possible. - This calls for an evolutionary approach in
cooperation with the emergency authorities. - In principle, National Regulatory Authorities
could impose an obligation on certain non-PATS
service providers to offer emergency service
access, under Condition (8) of Annex A of the
Authorisation Directive on Consumer Protection
Rules specific to the electronic communications
sector.
The Treatment of VoIP under the EU Regulatory
Frameworkhttp//europa.eu.int/information_society
/topics/ecomm/doc/useful_information/library/commi
ss_serv_doc/406_14_voip_consult_paper_v2_1.pdf
5Proposal of consulation paper
- However the practicalities of call routing and
handling have not yet been resolved by the
market, and until they are, such an obligation
may not be technically feasible and could be
disproportionate. - It is proposed that
- NRAs could require suppliers of VoIP services
that include access to the public telephone
network to give precise information to customers
on how the VoIP supplier deals with access to
emergency services and caller location. - Such information should be provided in the
customer contract drawn up in accordance with
Article 20 of the Universal Service Directive. - The Commission will regularly review evolution in
this area.
6 on Routing of Emergency Calls
- The possibility to route a call to the nearest
Emergency Service centre implies that the service
provider (either publicly available ECS or PATS)
has sufficient information to allow the call to
be correctly routed. - This is only possible if the location of the user
making the emergency call is known in some way or
another, and the service provider knows the
nearest emergency service centre to which the
call should be routed. - Currently, with some VoIP based services, in
particular nomadic services, the VoIP service
provider has no knowledge of the physical
location of the caller nor of the nearest
emergency service centre. - It would be disproportionate at the present stage
of market development to impose such routing
obligations on all VoIP providers.
7 on PATS and PAECS
- in the case of PATS,
- the actual making of an emergency call, and the
provision of caller location information to
emergency services, should be possible without
the user having to input any location information
either before making the emergency call or when
initially installing the terminal device. - This probably means that the provider of such
service needs to conclude some agreement with the
provider of the underlying transport
infrastructure (!) - in the case of publicly available ECS,
- NRAs could require that the making of a call to
the emergency services happens without the user
having to provide any location information. - The user may be invited to provide location
information when initially installing the
terminal device at a particular location.
8 expects solutions from market players
- At the current state of the market, it is
advisable not to present an undue burden on
market players, but it will be necessary to
follow developments in this area closely as the
market evolves. - In the case of those ECS and PATS services where
users have the possibility to move their
terminal, and where this causes a problem for the
undertaking to determine the users location,
users need to be warned that when moving their
terminals from agreed fixed location, they can
not be guaranteed to be provided with emergency
services. - Market players offering VoIP based services are
encouraged to devise and rapidly implement
operational solutions for the effective handling
of calls to emergency services (ok, will do).
9 on Caller Location
- In the context of PATS, Member States are to
ensure that undertakings that operate public
telephone networks make caller location
information available to authorities handling
emergencies for calls to the European Emergency
call number 112. - In the Directives the provision of this location
information is made dependant of the technical
feasibility. - Considering the importance of providing location
information it is proposed that - NRAs encourage all undertakings offering PATS at
fixed locations to provide location information. - This may imply some form of agreement between the
operator offering the PATS service and the
underlying provider of the transport
infrastructure. - The Privacy Directive foresees that, where
Calling-Line Identification is offered, an
undertaking may override a users elimination of
the presentation of this CLI, for calls to
organisations dealing with emergency calls.
10 on Caller Location (cont.)
- Given the importance for emergency services of
both the location and CLI information, Member
States should encourage the provision of this
information, both for PATS and for publicly
available ECS. - Market players offering VoIP based services are
encouraged to devise and rapidly implement
operational solutions for the effective
transmission of caller ID and the provision of
location information for calls to emergency
services - The Commission will regularly review evolution in
this area.
11Or in other words
- a flawed (best-effort) access to emergency
services is better than none - new technologies should be given some time to
evolve - e.g. mobile services took more than 10 years
- because they may finally provide better services
then currently available and possible - much of the work done already for providing
caller location to PSAPs for E112 could also be
used for VoIP (databases, interfaces, )
12Status of mobile networks
- Mobile phones have no power supply
- Reachability of emergency services is not
guarantied - Ok, could route the call to the correct ECC, but
- No location information for 10 years
- No identification for SIM-less calls (on the
contrary, this is a requirement) - 200.000.000 pre-paid cards out in Europe without
identification
13Statements
- The ability to call for help in times of an
emergency is not voluntary its mandatory. - David F. Jones, VP NENA (Testimony at the FCC
Hearing) - The use of IP protocols could provide the
emergency systems with expanded services, more
resilient networks and faster response times - Henning Schulzrinne
14The basic Emergency Call Problems
- Determine a call is an emergency call
- 4 basic requirements
- Locate the caller
- Route the call to the correct ECC (PSAP)
- Include the location of the caller so help can be
dispatched to the right place - Include a way to call back if disconnected
- In addition
- Provide caller identity
- Guaranty ECC (PSAP) reachability
15Some work has already be done
- IETF
- US
- E911 (NENA, APCO, VON Coalition, )
- Europe
- E112 (CGALIES, LOCUS, ETSI, LIF, )
- UK (EISEC)
-
16Current IETF drafts
- draft-taylor-sipping-emerg-scen-01
- scenarios, e.g., hybrid VoIP-PSTN
- draft-schulzrinne-sipping-emergency-arch-00
- overall architecture for emergency calling
- draft-ietf-sipping-sos-00
- describes sos SIP URI
- draft-rosen-dns-sos-00
- new DNS resource records for location mapping
17Major topics
- Common URI for emergency calls sipsos_at_home.domain
(and 112 and 911) - Use the global DNS to store information on
emergency numbers, ESRP, ECC service areas - Use different means to retrieve location
information (DHCP, GPS, RFID, GSM, ) - Push location information to ECC or let ECC
subscribe to location information - Use authentication and TLS during call setup
- For more info see presentations of Brian Rosen
and the current work of IETF
18Architectural assumptions and goals by IETF
- SIP-based for interchange
- International (global)
- devices bought anywhere can make emergency calls
anywhere - limit biases in address formats, languages,
- avoid built-in bias for 911 or 112 (mostly)
- Support other communications modes
- IM, SMS, MMS, video, email
- Support access for callers with disabilities
- real-time text
- video for sign language
19Common URL for emergency services
- Emergency numbers may be dialed from many
different places - about 60 (national) different emergency service
numbers in the world - many are used for other services elsewhere (e.g.,
directory assistance) - IETF draft suggests sipsos_at_home-domain
- home-domain domain of caller
- Can be recognized by proxies along the way
- short cut to emergency infrastructure
- If not, it reaches home proxy of subscriber
- Call can be routed from there easily
- global access to routing information (see later)
- allows also service identification
sipsos.fire_at_home-domain - 112 and 911 should always be available (VoIP
dialing plans needed) - Default configuration if no other information
available - 000, 08, 110, 999, 118 and 119
- needs definitely further study
20Using the global DNS
- Emergency number configuration
- Determining the PSAP/ECC where the call should be
routed to - service area of PSAP/ECC
- new infrastructure domain sos.arpa proposed
21Determining locations
- Either network-provided or terminal-provided
- Conveyed via DHCP from IP-level provider
- Formats
- geospatial (longitude, latitude, altitude or
floor) - civil (country, administrative units, street)
- Provider usually knows
- Does not depend on being a voice service provider
- 802.11 triangulation
- GPS (for ALL mobile devices)
- RFID tags in rooms
- Via configuration protocol (XCAP)
- relies on VSP having accurate service location
information - User-configured (last resort)
22How does the ECC find the callers location?
- Largest difference to existing E911 system
- In-band, as part of call setup
- carried in body of setup message
- rather than by reference into external database
- May be updated during call
- moving vehicles
- late availability of information (GPS acquisition
delay) - Also possible subscribe to location information
(proposed method see below)
23Privacy and authentication
- Want to ensure privacy of call setup information
- prevent spoofing of call origins
- but cant enforce call authentication
- need to authenticate call destination
- ideally, certificate for ECCs
- but initially just verify that reached
DNS-indicated destination - use TLS (SSL), as in https//
- host certificates widely available
- just need a domain name and a credit card
24Testing emergency calls
- Current E911 system has no good way to test 911
reachability without interfering with emergency
services - With VoIP, more distributed systems ? more need
for testing - Use SIP OPTIONS request ? route request, but
dont reach call taker - Also, DNS model allows external consistency
checking - e.g., nationwide 911 testing agency
25How does VoIP (IPC) differ from landline and
wireless PSTN?
- Telephone companies are no longer needed
- there are still carriers for DSL and cable IP
dial tone - but unaware of type of data carried
- IPCSP may be in another state or country
- Corporations and universities dont have email
carriers, either - even residential users may have servers
- Addresses (Names) may be non-numeric (not E.164)
- Media is not necessarily voice
voice service provider (RTP)
Yahoo
Backbone (IP)
MCI
Access(WiFi
Starbucks
User
26Take away messages
- Phones (terminals) must change
- Learn location (GPS, DHCP,..)
- Learn local emergency number from DNS
- Recognize emergency call
- Include location on the emergency call
- Proxy servers must change
- Recognize emergency call
- Route to ECC based on location (using DNS)
- All elements must implement sips (TLS)
- ISPs must implement DHCP location
27Emergency Services Obligations
- Currently telephony service providers have
obligations regarding emergency services - This should be reconsidered with VoIP (IP
Communications in general) and especially if
Broadband may be considered as the Universal
Service of the future - In this case contact to emergency services could
also be multimedia and made in addition to voice
also by messaging, video and even via a web
browser - depending on terminal capabilities
28There will be obligations to
- terminal providers
- to receive, store and forward location
information (GPS) - access providers, ISPs and enterprises
- to provide location information via DHCP and/or
other means (mobile) - operating systems and application SW
- to provide minimum set of capabilities and
recognize emergency requests (sos in browser?) - building infrastructure
- to provide RFIDs in rooms
- DNS infrastructure (sos.arpa.)
- to provide ECC/PSAP locations and emergency
numbers - communications service providers
- to handle and route emergency calls properly
- emergency routing proxies
- to feed location databases, provide pseudo CLIs,
route calls to ECC/PSAPs or other ESRP. - ECC/PSAPs
- be able to use information provided
29How location information is retrieved
- All location information is gathered by the
terminal - either network provided
- DHCP
- Mobile triangulation
- WiFi triangulation
- or by the terminal itself
- From the user
- Via GPS
- Via RFID
- and transmitted in an emergency call at call
setup (INVITE) or during the call (NOTIFY) - together with the location information also the
source is transmitted, multiple information is
possible.
30Proposal for a staged approach
to access emergency services from IP-based
networks
- 0. the existing situation
- 1. from the Internet via VoIP to PSAPs/ECCs on
the PSTN/ISDN with enhancements - 2. from the Internet to PSAPs/ECCs also
connected to the Internet using IPC - 3. both PSAP/ECC and User are using NGN
31Stage 0
- No problem for VoIP provided at a fixed location
using geographic numbers or for users with FXO
life-line - For nomadic users
- Emergency calls always routed to home PSAP/ECC
for a given subscriber or - emergency calls only possible if location is
provided to VoIP SP manually, but - how can this information be provided to PSAP/ECC
in time? - recognition by PSAP/ECC via CLI of non-geographic
number - better then nothing
- but problem of call routing to correct PSAP/ECC
still exists - No access to emergency services for IP-only
providers with no E.164 number?
32Stage 0
IPCSP need access to local gateway operators
Gateway Operator
DNS
Internet
PSAPs/ECCs
PSTN
IPCSPs
Terminal Adapter with FXO life-line
fixed users
nomadic users
33Proposed Architecture Stage 1
- PSAPs/ECC still on PSTN, using existing
technology - All emergency calls are routed via the (Home)
Emergency Service Routing Proxy (ESRP) - Users may subscribe directly, giving his
preferences - in this case the ESRP is also a SIP- and presence
server - Subscriber needs to identify himself at
subscription time - ESRP guaranties the subscriber to disclose
identity and location information only to
emergency services (or on user push) - ESRP implements the local (national) policy
34Stage 1 (cont.)
- Location information is either entered manually
by user or transmitted from the device - ESRP is able to map location information to
routing information to proper PSAP/ECC by using
local databases or the DNS - ESRP is able to provide PSAP/ECC with screened
CLI - For calls from users without E.164 number a
pseudo number (CLI) may be set up - PSAPs/ECCs need only to have narrow-band Internet
access to retrieve the presence information
indexed by CLI (watcher) - If location of user is out-side of ESRP boundary,
the call may be routed easily (and trusted) to
other ESRPs - These ESRP may be found via sos.arpa
- Devices or applications need to be able to
support more then one line indication of
availability of ES recommended
35Stage 1 direct
ECC looks up name and location information
ESRP
Gateway Operator
DNS
IPCSP
CLI presented to ECC
lookup ECC
Internet
PSAPs/ECCs
PSTN
location
Terminal Adapter with FXO life-line
36Usage of existing databases
- If a database for providing location information
for fixed and mobile calls is already existing - this database and the related interfaces may be
used for VoIP too - e.g. in UK
- Enhanced Information Service for Emergency Calls
(EISEC SIN 278) and - Emergency Location Information Interface
ND10132002/11
37Stage 1 via IPCSP
lookup ECC
ECC looks up name and location information
ESRP
Gateway Operator
DNS
IPCSP
CLI presented to ECC
location and identity
Internet
PSAPs/ECCs
PSTN
location
Terminal Adapter with FXO life-line
38Forward to foreign ESRP
ECC looks up name and location information
foreign ESRP
lookup ECC
DNS
Gateway Operator
home ESRP
CLI presented to ECC
Internet
PSAPs/ECCs
PSTN
location
Terminal Adapter with FXO life-line
39Advantages of this approach
- IPCSP need not to be involved in emergency
services - Users may not trust IPCSP regarding identity and
location information - Reachability of ES may be better guarantied
- No E.164 number required
- Identity also possible with prepaid services
- Global connectivity achieved more easily
- Implementation of local policies possible
- Call back to contact address possible
40Migration to Stage 2
- No or minor changes required in ESRP
- If PSAP/ECC decides to migrate to VoIP, calls are
not routed via the gateway, but directly to the
SIP-server of the PSAP/ECC - Name and location information will be transmitted
directly - Location information may be dispatched directly
to emergency vehicles
41Stage 3
- Left to ETSI and EMTEL
- Stage 3 would be the full support of emergency
services in NGN environments for which various
work items have been opened. ETSI needs to ensure
that they are aligned with NENA for this future
network scenario.
42The End
Richard Stastny ÖFEG 43 664 420
4100 richard.stastny_at_oefeg.at