News

OpenID and OAuth think that they have a collective right answer, but Facebook clearly thinks that it has its own. As Louis Gray told me in a discussion about the subject, it will likely come down ...
A serious vulnerability in both the OAuth and OpenID protocols could lead to complications for those who use the services to login to websites like Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Yahoo, Microsoft ...
Another day, another major internet security flaw (step aside, Heartbleed). A bug has been found in OpenID and OAuth 2.0, two authentication programs that let you log into web sites using your ...
OAuth 2.0 and OpenID Connect: The Professional Guide Authentication and authorization are critical parts of any application. They evolved over the years to meet the challenging requirements of the ...
The vulnerability targets OpenID and OAuth, two open-source login tools that allows users to sign up or sign in at other websites using their existing information on other websites, such as ...
OpenID provides one login for a variety of sites, and is used to authenticate that you are who you say you are. OAuth authorizes access so that, say, one website can get your information elsewhere.
OAuth is an open-standard authorization protocol or framework that describes how unrelated servers and services can safely allow authenticated access to their assets. It is widely accepted, but be ...
Signs continue to point in a positive direction for OpenID. Representatives from major web companies and innovative players are meeting at Yahoo today to discuss the user experience of OpenID and ...
Perhaps more interesting from a particular perspective is Bloglines’ intention to provide support for oAuth (Open Authentication) and APML (Attention Profiling Mark-up Language).