"The duration in seconds of the access token lifetime." I liked 'lifetime' better than 'expires_in' (for no particular reason), but lifetime can mean number of uses.
EHL On 4/6/10 8:24 AM, "Luke Shepard" <[email protected]> wrote: Just curious, where did "duration" come from? I hate to be picky, but I feel like "expires_in" is more clear than "duration" ... if only because other protocols (OAuth 1.0a, OpenID, Facebook auth) use "expires". On Apr 6, 2010, at 12:11 AM, Eran Hammer-Lahav wrote: Changed to 'duration'. EHL On 4/5/10 9:09 AM, "David Recordon" <[email protected] <x-msg://353/[email protected]> > wrote: As one of our engineers was implementing a client, they got confused about what was being returned by the expires parameter. Anyone object to renaming it to expires_in so that it's clear that it isn't an absolute timestamp? Thanks, --David _______________________________________________ OAuth mailing list [email protected] <x-msg://353/[email protected]> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth <ATT00001..txt>
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