The tokens are definitely short-lived, and I don't think there is a
way to use them on the server side. It's likely not meant to be a
simple implementation of oAuth.
On Apr 17, 3:12 pm, Shannon Whitley swhit...@whitleymedia.com wrote:
I spoke with the devs at Chirp and I'm planning to use the
Sort of wondering the same thing. After authenticating, you'll notice
your browser stores a cookie called twtter_anywhere, which I believe
contains the request token.
Would love to be able to use that request token to make Twitter API
calls, but have no idea how to get the token secret.
Thanks
My understanding is the @Anywhere access tokens are short lived of only a
few hours. Maybe Twitter can confirm that.
Abraham
On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 10:10, mike michael.mign...@gmail.com wrote:
Sort of wondering the same thing. After authenticating, you'll notice
your browser stores a cookie
I spoke with the devs at Chirp and I'm planning to use the token during the
auth process. They confirmed that it is short-lived though.
On Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Abraham Williams 4bra...@gmail.com wrote:
My understanding is the @Anywhere access tokens are short lived of only a
few