Hans Granqvist wrote:
Howdy Jeff,
PS3 clients, etc. are off limits to discuss publicly, sorry.
Ok.
Did you see the list of apps using the public Netflix APIs?
http://www.netflix.com/AppGallery
Btw, why do you feel 3rd party apps authorized to manipulate a customer's
resources (that is, doing something OAuth was designed for) won't get
a nod of appreciation?
I am trying to get the "nod of recognition". That is, it would be nice
if I could point out that people had been using some OAuth for a while
already and just weren't aware of the technology itself. The PS3 client
would have been a great example. How does the standard PC client work?
Is that off limits too? The examples in the app gallery are for the most
part unknown and there is no way to judge how well they work.
I am not wedded to Netflix for an example, it would just be nice to be
able to have a known, industrial strength application most people had seen.
What do you plan to use OAuth for?
This would, potentially, be a part of http://www.cilogon.org/ which
allows users to generate an x 509 certificate. OAuth would allow much
needed delegation to 3rd parties. Since this is for a very heavy-duty
security crowd (and, by the way would be darn good press for OAuth if we
do it), they really want to know who is using it and more importantly
that it has a tried and true track record. The technology looks very
good, but security is a very conservative affair and unless there is
some visible support, they will balk at being first. Is this clear?
Thanks!
-- jj
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"OAuth" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/oauth?hl=en.