twitpic will not have to ask for usernames and passwords anymore, nor will
users have to actually authorize twitpic (as twitpic is not doing anything
on their behalf -- it is just confirming their identity).
i think this is a good thing.
On Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 11:26 PM, Jesse Stay
hi - i'm still a bit behind, but i've posted a sample workflow of how
identity delegation may work in oauth - this is definitely a RFC, so
please feel free to comment.
http://mehack.com/a-proposal-for-delegation-in-oauth-identity-v
On Feb 4, 6:33 pm, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
So am I understanding this correctly that this means TwitPic won't have to
ask for the user's Twitter username and Password any more and will instead
be able to use OAuth and still provide an API to their users? I'm trying to
figure out if this is encouraging the use of the username and password
Hi Raffi
No worries - hope you're feeling better soon! If we can be of any help
with getting this out the door, please let me know!
Cheers
-N
--
twitter.com/nikf
This is awesome news. Kudos to your pragmatic approach with xAuth and
looking forward to your recursive delegation plans. Blogged it here:
http://aralbalkan.com/3057
I hope the UX community supports Twitter in this.
Aral
On Feb 4, 4:57 pm, isaiah isa...@mac.com wrote:
Oh wow, oh wow, oh wow!
hi nik.
i'm not entirely certain yet. i'm working on a blog post that will
hopefully outline what our plans with oauth is moving forward -- being sick
just threw a damper in getting it out :P
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 7:09 AM, Nik Fletcher nik.fletc...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Raffi
This is great
Yes, what magic is this?
I'm confused. It takes username and password but then uses OAuth?
I wonder if they are injecting the username/password into the OAuth form on
the page.
Twitter should really randomize that page or require captcha or something.
Zac Bowling
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at
Zach,
There's a soon to be published API method where you can silently get
the OAuth tokens when you have the account's Twitter username and
password, meaning the user does not experience any of the normal OAuth
flow.
I presume that Seesmic just got early access to that method.
So, in this
I poked around Seesmic Look a little and this is what I found:
http://the.hackerconundrum.com/2010/02/sneak-peek-at-twitters-browserless.html
Abraham
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 14:24, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Zach,
There's a soon to be published API method where you can silently
Interesting, Abraham.
Don't we ever need OAuth Wrap, otherwise that x-auth-password will be
sent in clear text, kind of making a mockery of the whole OAuth thing.
On Feb 4, 6:35 pm, Abraham Williams 4bra...@gmail.com wrote:
I poked around Seesmic Look a little and this is what I
I would imagine that Twitter will require SSL for xAuth calls.
Abraham
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 14:44, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Interesting, Abraham.
Don't we ever need OAuth Wrap, otherwise that x-auth-password will be
sent in clear text, kind of making a mockery of the whole
totally.
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 3:23 PM, Abraham Williams 4bra...@gmail.com wrote:
I would imagine that Twitter will require SSL for xAuth calls.
Abraham
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 14:44, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Interesting, Abraham.
Don't we ever need OAuth Wrap,
However - will we ever see the ability for 3rd party applications to
talk to eachother using oAuth tokens? For example a custom twitter
oAuth application using TwitPic to publish photos?
On Feb 4, 6:26 pm, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
totally.
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 3:23 PM,
TweetPhoto offers an OAuth solution for uploading photos.
Please check out the link below and let me know if you have any
questions.
http://groups.google.com/group/tweetphoto/web/oauth-signin
Thanks!
Sean
On Feb 2, 7:04 am, Feras Allaou feras.all...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Sirs,
I was trying
i'll be posting our proposal for oauth delegation soon as a RFC.
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 3:41 PM, Greg gregory.av...@gmail.com wrote:
However - will we ever see the ability for 3rd party applications to
talk to eachother using oAuth tokens? For example a custom twitter
oAuth application using
*Great news!*
*Thanks!
*
-
Pedro Junior
2010/2/4 Nik Fletcher nik.fletc...@gmail.com
Hi Raffi
This is great news. We're currently using OAuth in Socialite on OS X
[and I believe we're one of the few OAuth apps out there on the Mac].
How will the migration process go for existing desktop
Oh wow, oh wow, oh wow!
On Feb 3, 11:49 am, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
it will be available publicly soon!
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Raffi,
Have you tried it? There is no OAuth flow. I.e., the user types in his
Twitter
oh wow!
how do i get in on this sweet UX goodness?
is there a form for submitting bribes or is it in-person only?
isaiah
On Feb 3, 11:49 am, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
it will be available publicly soon!
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com
That's awesome. Please let us know when you do!
Michael.
On Feb 4, 2010, at 6:33 PM, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
i'll be posting our proposal for oauth delegation soon as a RFC.
On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 3:41 PM, Greg gregory.av...@gmail.com wrote:
However - will we ever see the
seesmic look, i believe, is using oauth talking to api.twitter.com.
On Tue, Feb 2, 2010 at 8:09 PM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Raffi,
What's going on here?
Your credibility is at stake here. You've been telling us in many
posts that new apps must use OAuth to get a source
Raffi,
Have you tried it? There is no OAuth flow. I.e., the user types in his
Twitter username and password. That's it.
If it is indeed using OAuth, does that mean that the background
requesting of tokens when you have the Twitter credentials is now
available? Meaning, I can also now use it to
it will be available publicly soon!
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
Raffi,
Have you tried it? There is no OAuth flow. I.e., the user types in his
Twitter username and password. That's it.
If it is indeed using OAuth, does that mean that the
Thanks!
I installed Seesmic Look, but never thought of checking the
Connections tab in Twitter.
Crow does not taste all that bad with a thick layer of mustard and
spices.
On Feb 3, 3:49 pm, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
it will be available publicly soon!
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at
That is definitely good news, thanks for the update.
-Ted
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 11:49 AM, Raffi Krikorian ra...@twitter.com wrote:
it will be available publicly soon!
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.comwrote:
Raffi,
Have you tried it? There is no OAuth
If it is indeed using OAuth, does that mean that the background
requesting of tokens when you have the Twitter credentials is now
available? Meaning, I can also now use it to convert all existing
Twitter accounts to OAuth in one fell swoop?
it will be available publicly soon!
Excellent!
At first I thought they must have changed the old Seesmic source to
Seesmic Look.
But no.
Here's a recent tweet from Seesmic:
http://twitter.com/CathyBrooks/status/8570217879
And here's a recent one from Seesmic Look:
http://twitter.com/adamse/status/8565271563
Seesmic Look uses Basic Auth.
Raffi,
What's going on here?
Your credibility is at stake here. You've been telling us in many
posts that new apps must use OAuth to get a source attribution, and
only old grandfathered apps have source attribution with Basic Auth.
On Feb 2, 11:18 pm, Dewald Pretorius dpr...@gmail.com wrote:
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