On 6/4/07, Russell Keith-Magee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Furthermore, I shouldn't be placed in a position where I have to
> believe you. You may well have the best of intentions, but people
> should _NEVER_ give their password to _ANYONE_ but the website that
> the password is for. Encouraging
Have you considered OpenID? I'm no expert but it might provide you
with the authentication you're looking for, without having to collect
passwords.
doug.
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On 6/4/07, Sam Willis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Eric,
>
> For each website you are a member of you need to verify that you are
> in fact the user that owns that account. If this process wasn't there
> then some one could impersonate another user. For digg and a few
> others the method to
Eric,
For each website you are a member of you need to verify that you are
in fact the user that owns that account. If this process wasn't there
then some one could impersonate another user. For digg and a few
others the method to verify is currently to enter your username and
password. The
Hello,
I signed up for the website, but at the point where it started asking
me to enter my username/password for many different social networking
sites, red flags started to go up. What reason would your site need
my password for digg.com, for example? Based on my username alone,
the RSS feed
Hi,
I have been following discussions on this group for a while now and
believe that this is a good place to gain some feedback on my site -
www.flutterbox.com. Flutterbox is a social networking tool that allows
each user to track what their friends and colleagues are doing on
multiple websites
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