Out of band does not necessarily mean a change in protocol - i.e. I do not believe the term, as used here, is meant to have quite the same connotations as 'out of band' in the telecommunications space. You can have an out of band message that is still HTTP, but is submitted outside of the normal, interactive conversation between an HTTP server and an HTTP client. For example, the OAuth 2.0 Username-Password Flow includes an 'out of band' POST from the client to the server to request an access token, and it is deemed 'out of band' because, normally, the client would have first conversed with the server to get an authorization token and then requested an access token, but, in this case, authorization is already bestowed by virtue of the username/password in the request.