On Tuesday, 27 March 2012 07:18:26 UTC-7, Roy Smith  wrote:
> In article 
> <7909491.0.1332826232743.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@pbim5>,
>  Demian Brecht <demianbre...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> > OAuth 2.0 is still in draft status (draft 25 is the current one I believe) 
> > and yes, unfortunately every single server available at this point have 
> > varying degrees of separation from the actual spec. It's not a 
> > pseudo-standard, it's just not observed to the letter. Google is the 
> > closest 
> > and Facebook seems to be the farthest away (Stack Exchange is in close 
> > second 
> > due to building theirs to work like Facebook's).
> 
> In practice, OAuth is all about getting your site to work with Facebook.  
> That is all most web sites care about today because that's where the 
> money is.  The fact that other sites also use OAuth is of mostly 
> academic interest at this point.
> 
> The next player on the list is Twitter, and they're not even up to using 
> their own incompatible version of OAuth 2.0.  They're still using OAuth 
> 1.0 (although, I understand, they're marching towards 2.0).

Sure, with the initial surge of the Facebook platform, I'm sure there are many 
more applications that only work with Facebook. However, after the initial gold 
rush, I'm sure there will be more developers who see the potential power of 
service aggregation (and not just for feeds ;)). I know I'm one of them.

Of course, a lot of these thoughts are around niche markets, but isn't that 
where the money is? Untapped, niche markets? That's a completely different 
discussion though and would obviously be quite the thread derailment.
-- 
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to