Straight impersonation with no limitations isn't a good solution in the long 
run. 

     On Monday, February 16, 2015 1:13 PM, William Denniss 
<[email protected]> wrote:
   

 I led a discussion on a related topic at a recent IIW (specifically exploring 
the "account sharing" use case), the notes are here: 
http://iiw.idcommons.net/Account_Sharing_at_the_IDP_(Identity_Provider).  It 
was an interesting discussion, the whole topic of impersonation certainly 
raises a lot of policy questions.
As for the technical implementation, our conclusion was that the simplest 
approach for impersonation would be to continue to supply an ID Token for the 
target user (i.e. 'sub' represents the user being impersonated), and add an 
additional JWT claim for the user doing the impersonation (e.g. 'ipb' meaning 
"impersonated by").
Thus, any relying party who doesn't understand this claim continues to work as 
before (oblivious to the fact the user is being impersonated), and those who 
understand the claim and care about impersonation can take action (e.g. log a 
better audit trail, limit some functionality or outright block the behavior).
If this approach sounds interesting to you, perhaps we could formally register 
& standardise the 'ipb' claim.  Of course, anyone can use this technique today 
via a private claim.

On Mon Feb 16 2015 at 7:36:23 AM Justin Richer <[email protected]> wrote:

Another question is whether or not you can user rights delegation (ie vanilla 
OAuth) or if you really do need impersonation. You may be able to get the 
desired results with less complexity that way.

-- Justin
/ Sent from my phone /

-------- Original message --------
From: Bill Burke <[email protected]> 
Date:02/16/2015 10:20 AM (GMT-05:00) 
To: Bill Mills <[email protected]>, Justin Richer <[email protected]>, oauth 
<[email protected]> 
Cc: 
Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] user impersonation protocol? 

Yeah, I know its risky, but that's the requirement.  Was just wondering 
if there was any protocol work being done around it, so that we could 
avoid doing a lot of the legwork to make it safe/effective.  Currently 
for us, we need to do this between two separate IDPs, which is where the 
protocol work comes in...If it was just a single IDP managing 
everything, then it would just be an internal custom IDP feature.

Thanks all.



On 2/16/2015 12:37 AM, Bill Mills wrote:
> User impersonation is very very risky.  The legal aspects of it must be
> considered.  There's a lot of work to do to make it safe/effective.
>
> Issuing a scoped token that allows ready only access can work with the
> above caveats.  Then properties/componenets have to explicitly support
> the new scope and do the right thing.
>
>
> On Sunday, February 15, 2015 8:34 PM, Justin Richer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> For this case you'd want to be very careful about who was able to do
> such impersonation, obviously, but it's doable today with custom IdP
> behavior. You can simply use OpenID Connect and have the IdP issue an id
> token for the target user instead of the "actual" current user account.
>
> I would also suggest considering adding a custom claim to the id token
> to indicate this is taking place. That way you can differentiate where
> needed, including in logs.
>
> -- Justin
>
> / Sent from my phone /
>
>
> -------- Original message --------
> From: Bill Burke <[email protected]>
> Date:02/15/2015 10:55 PM (GMT-05:00)
> To: oauth <[email protected]>
> Cc:
> Subject: [OAUTH-WG] user impersonation protocol?
>
> We have a case where we want to allow a logged in admin user to
> impersonate another user so that they can visit differents browser apps
> as that user (So they can see everything that the user sees through
> their browser).
>
> Anybody know of any protocol work being done here in the OAuth group or
> some other IETF or even Connect effort that would support something like
> this?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Bill
>
> --
> Bill Burke
> JBoss, a division of Red Hat
> http://bill.burkecentral.com
>
> _______________________________________________
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>

-- 
Bill Burke
JBoss, a division of Red Hat
http://bill.burkecentral.com
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