Thanks for the replies Dick.

On Jun 5, 2010, at 7:35 AM, Dick Hardt wrote:

OAuth standardizes an existing design pattern that had numerous proprietary 
implementations. Of course it will get "adopted" -- the design pattern is 
already implemented. People implement OAuth because they want to get access to 
APIs at a resource. Sure, some of those APIs provide identity data, but it is 
NOT a distributed identity system.

Agreed. Of course it will get adopted, and it does not by itself provide a 
distributed identity system.

It is NOT a distributed identity system. If you can make discovery work for 
OAuth, then you can make it work for OpenID. OAuth implementations today do NOT 
have discovery.

Agreed. OAuth does not say anything about discovery. That's why it would need 
to be added in a separate spec.

OAuth 2.0 does NOT solve the problems that OpenID was trying to solve.

OAuth does not solve ALL of the problems of OpenID, but it does solve SOME. 
From the OpenID website, "OpenID allows you to use an existing account to sign 
in to multiple websites, without needing to create new passwords." That's the 
same goal that's accomplished by the myriad proprietary providers out there 
today, and if many independent companies are choosing OAuth to solve that 
problem, then it makes sense to build on top of what's working. Of course OAuth 
does not address the decentralized nature of OpenID by itself, but it could 
easily be adapted with a separate spec to accommodate them.

Look, I'm not saying I have all the answers, but it's okay, because at this 
point we aren't voting on a spec. The proposal is just to form a working group, 
for crying out loud - an email list where we can discuss using OAuth to advance 
OpenID, share implementations.

You said that you think that even considering using OAuth "contravenes the OIDF 
Foundation's stated mission." One of the stated missions of the OpenID 
Foundation is to "supporting expanded adoption of OpenID". If OAuth is going to 
become a widely adopted internet technology, then it seems plausible that 
building on top of OAuth could dramatically increase OpenID adoption. Putting 
up roadblocks this early in the process prevents innovation when it needs to 
happen most.

- Luke

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