A bunch of different people either have implemented or are implementing BIP70 at the moment. Here's a bunch of things I've been telling people in response to questions. At some point I'll submit a pull req with this stuff in but for now it's just an email.

Error handling during signature checking

I've had queries around the right behaviour here. BIP 70 is underspecified and we should fix it IMO. If PKI checking fails you should just treat the request as if it's unsigned. The reason is that there is no incentive for an attacker to break the signature instead of just removing it entirely, so an attacker would never trigger any error flows you put in. However, someone who is signing their request with an unknown CA or using an upgraded version of the protocol that isn't entirely backwards compatible could trigger signature checking failure.

Therefore, in order to make introducing new (possibly community run) CA's or new variations on signing possible, please treat any errors as if there was no signature at all. This is not what browsers do,  but browsers have an advantage - they were already given an identity and told to expect a secure protocol when the user typed in the web address with an https:// prefix (or clicked a link). Unfortunately a Bitcoin wallet has no context like this.

One person asked me whether this makes the whole scheme pointless because a MITM can just delete the signature. The answer is no - downgrade attacks are always possible on systems that start out insecure. The solution is to train users to expect the upgrade and refuse to go ahead if it's not there. Training users to expect signed payment requests will be a big task similar to the way the browser industry trained users to look for the padlock when typing in credit card details, but it must be done.

Because wallets lack context there's no equivalent to HSTS for us either. So in your GUI's try to train the user - when showing a signed payment request, tell them to expect the recipient name to appear in future and that they should not proceed if it doesn't. This gives us a kind of mental HSTS.

Extended validation certs

When a business is accepting payment, showing the name of the business is usually better than showing just the domain name, for a few reasons:
  1. Unless your domain name is your business name like blockchain.info, it looks better and gives more info.

  2. Domain names are more phishable than EV names, e.g. is the right name bitpay.com or bit-pay.com or bitpay.co.uk?

  3. More important: Someone who hacks your web server or DNS provider can silently get themselves a domain name SSL cert issued, probably without you noticing. Certificate transparency will eventually fix that but it's years away from full deployment. It's much harder for a hacker to get a bogus EV cert issued to them because there's a lot more checking involved.
EV certs still have the domain name in the CN field, but they also have the business name in the OU field.

In theory we are supposed to have extra code to check that a certificate really was subject to extended validation before showing the contents of this field. In practice either bitcoinj nor Bitcoin Core actually do, they just always trust it. It'd be nice to fix that in future.

You should show the organisation data instead of the domain name if you find it, for EV certs.

pki=none

Signing is optional in BIP 70 for good reasons. One implementor told me they were considering rejecting unsigned payment requests. Do not do this! A MITM can easily rewrite the bitcoin URI to look as if BIP70 isn't in use at all. 

Even though today most (all?) payment requests you'll encounter are signed, it's important that signing is optional because in future we need individual people to start generating payment requests too, and many of them won't have any kind of memorisable digital identity. Plus other people just won't want to do it. BIP70 is about lots of features, signing is only one.

S/MIME certs

Email address certs look a bit different to SSL certs. You can get one for free from here

    https://comodo.com/home/email-security/free-email-certificate.php

In these certs the display name can be found in the Subject Alternative Name field with a type code of 1. Example code:

    https://github.com/bitcoinj/bitcoinj/commit/feecc8f48641cd02cafc42150abba4e4841ea33d

You won't encounter many of these today except on Gavin's test site, but in future people may wish to start creating and signing their own payment requests for individual purposes using these certs (especially as they are free). So please try to handle them correctly.

Broadcast vs upload

Please upload transactions and commit them to your wallet when the server responds with 200 OK, but expect the merchant to broadcast them. Don't give the user an option to pick - it's pointless as there's no obvious right answer.

Testing

You can find a test site here:

http://bitcoincore.org/~gavin/createpaymentrequest.php

It's testnet only. For testing regular payment requests on the main network, I use BitPay as they were the first seller-side implementation:

http://bitgivefoundation.org/donate-now/

Memo contents

Please put something useful here, ideally what is actually being sold but failing that, the name of the merchant if you're a payment processor. Don't be like BitPay and put large random numbers in the memo field but nothing about what's actually purchased. 

This is not particularly important today except for cosmetic reasons, because wallets don't store the payment requests they saw to disk. But in future they will and then a properly signed memo field + the transactions used for payment give us a digital receipt. Receipts are useful for things like filing expense reports, proving a purchase when returning an item to a merchant, etc.

Expiry times

Don't be too aggressive with these. Although today it doesn't matter much, some users may be trying to pay from multi-party accounts that require multiple humans to coordinate to make a payment.