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  • Birds of a Feather at IETF 126

    The IETF 126 Vienna meeting takes place 18–24 July 2026. As at every IETF meeting, alongside the established Working Groups there will be a handful of Birds-of-a-Feather (BoF) sessions—and these are often the most interesting place to watch where Internet standards work is heading next.

    2 Jul 2026
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    Martine Sophie Lenders has been regularly participating in the IETF for over a decade, starting with the IETF 93 meeting in Prague in 2015. She has authored several Internet-Drafts—two of which recently were published as RFCs—and at the same time works on a PhD at FU Berlin and as a research associate at TU Dresden. We asked a few questions about what her experience in the IETF has been like while pursuing an academic journey.

    1 Jul 2026
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    These IETF 126 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.

    29 Jun 2026
  • IETF LLC Board Retreat 2026

    The IETF Administration LLC Board of Directors held its annual retreat 29-30 April 2026 in Amsterdam. In addition to all Board members, the IETF Executive Director, the Director of Finance, and the Board Secretary were present. Here is a short summary of the main points we discussed.

    4 Jun 2026
  • IETF Administration LLC 2025 Annual Financial Audit

    IETF Administration LLC Board of Directors received from external auditors the report of a clean result for its 2025 annual financial statement.

    26 May 2026

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Ericsson Renews 10-year Global Host Agreement

7 Apr 2025

We’re excited to announce that Ericsson has renewed our 10-year agreement as a Global Host with the IETF. This ongoing partnership reflects our strong commitment to supporting the open development of the Internet and the technologies that drive it forward.

The IETF, as an open standards body, brings together a diverse community of engineers, researchers, and technologists to collaboratively develop the protocols that make the Internet work. Many of the technologies developed within the IETF are foundational to the products and services Ericsson builds every day. 

Ericsson Global Host

Technologies such as TLS 1.3 (Transport Layer Security), which helps keep online communications private and secure; HTTP/3, the protocol that powers the Web; and QUIC, a next-generation transport-layer protocol are just a few examples of IETF innovations that are central to what we do at Ericsson. Technologies such as IPv6, EVPN (Ethernet VPN), Segment Routing, and MPLS are essential to the support, function, and deployment of current and future mobile networks. Further, the IETF’s YANG development and modeling activities are a critical part of the management modeling foundation for packet and optical transport networks. This foundation not only forms the basis for advanced management and automation, including the application of AI to network management and operation, but also provides the base on which other industry recognized centers of competence (e.g., IEEE 802, ITU-T SG15, 3GPP, O-RAN Alliance, and others) build their YANG data models for advanced management.

Looking ahead, we are actively exploring new areas of innovation where the IETF is playing a key role. This includes enhancing the collaboration between networks and applications through initiatives such as Standard Communication with Network Elements (SCONE). Several technologies are likely to be directly applicable in the evolution towards 5G Advanced and 6G, stretching from the Static Context Header Compression (SCHC) header compression work to the Deterministic Networking (DETNET) activities. We are also closely following work around post-quantum security, including the efforts in the Crypto Forum Research Group (CFRG) and the ongoing evolution of TLS, to ensure our systems are prepared for the cryptographic challenges of the future. Additionally, we are engaged in early conversations about the impact of AI on networking, along with interest in emerging efforts like AI Preferences (AIPREF), which explores the interaction of AI with content creators.

Renewing our Global Host agreement is a reflection of our belief in the IETF’s mission and the importance of open, community-driven standards. We are proud to play a role in supporting the IETF’s work, not only by participating in technical discussions, but also by helping provide the infrastructure and resources needed to sustain its global operations. A couple of years ago, we also became the first multi-year gold-level IETF Running Code sponsor, which is another way we contribute to the practical implementation and testing of IETF standards, helping to turn ideas into real-world, deployable technologies.

We look forward to continuing this partnership and contributing to the future of the Internet alongside the IETF and its community.


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