It's the term used on the hueniverse beginner's guide to OAuth.  See
http://www.hueniverse.com/hueniverse/2008/10/beginners-guide.html

In particular, see the section headed "Direct & Delegated access".

According to the guide, "direct access" is also known as "the two-
legged scenario".

Is the term "direct access" completely unknown?



On Mar 8, 9:28 am, Eran Hammer-Lahav <[email protected]> wrote:
> Where did you get the idea of this "direct access" feature?
>
> EHL
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
> > Of CA Meijer
> > Sent: Saturday, March 07, 2009 11:23 PM
> > To: OAuth
> > Subject: [oauth] Twitter OAuth Direct Access
>
> > Hi
>
> > Out of curiosity I tried to log in to my twitter account using OAuth
> > with direct access (i.e. an empty token and token secret and with my
> > username and password as consumer key and secret).  I got a 401 HTTP
> > response and a message saying that my token was invalid or expired.  I
> > was wondering whether the problem arose because (1) I'm not a
> > registered user of their limited OAuth beta or (2) because they're
> > only going to support OAuth delegated access?
>
> > Does anyone know whether twitter is going to support direct access or
> > whether we're going to have to continue to supply passwords in the
> > clear over HTTP?
>
> > My apologies if the answers to these questions are documented
> > elsewhere and I missed them.
>
> > Carl
> > .
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