Here is the official OAuth statement: http://oauth.net/advisories/2009-1

On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 03:44, twitscoop <lollic...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> Hi guys, is there an ETA for it to be restored ? It seems Oauth's
> recommended approach is to simply add a warning notice on
> authorization until this is fixed (this is what Google did). Anyways,
> even with this security flow, oauth is safer than providing twitter
> credentials to third parties...
>
> Thanks!
> Pierre
>
> On Apr 23, 7:30 am, Doug Williams <d...@twitter.com> wrote:
> > Bill,
> > The majority of our developers find OAuth sufficient because they are
> > writing a Web applications. We are pleased that the deprecation of the
> > source parameter lowered our support load and continues to drive adoption
> of
> > our preferred authentication scheme.
> >
> > There are of course other cases where developers find the current
> > implementation's beta status or browser requirement concerning. I have
> yet
> > to reject a source parameter request that provides a valid argument
> > explaining why OAuth does not meet the application's needs.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Doug Williams
> > Twitter API Supporthttp://twitter.com/dougw
> >
> > On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 6:50 PM, Bill Robertson
> > <billrobertso...@gmail.com>wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > I respectfully disagree.  (I would colorfully disagree, but you seem
> > > pretty beat up right now and you don't deserve any guff)  I think
> > > developers of smaller apps see that little tag-line as a good source
> > > of advertising, and it seems inaccessible now if you're new (right?
> > > wrong?).  You can only get it if you use OAuth, but OAuth is now
> > > disabled?
> >
> > > Anyway, just my $0.02.  Prioritize it like everything else you need to
> > > do (i.e. it's the 37th #1 thing on your list.)
> >
> > > Good luck.
> >
> > > On Apr 22, 7:58 pm, Alex Payne <a...@twitter.com> wrote:
> > > > We don't consider source registration a "key feature". It's an
> > > > incentive we provide to our developers. We wanted to encourage new
> > > > developers to look into OAuth. It won't be in beta forever, after
> all.
> >
> > > > We have to balance the reality of testing a new technology in our
> > > > stack with encouraging that technology's adoption. OAuth will provide
> > > > the Twitter developer community with a number of benefits, and that's
> > > > the direction in which we want to move, even while there are kinks to
> > > > work out.
> >
> > > > On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 15:37, bwannon <bwan...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > > > If beta for you guys means "still in testing, not suitable for
> > > > > production use", then why depreciate key features from basic auth
> like
> > > > > source registration before you have a production ready release?
> >
> > > > > On Apr 22, 3:27 pm, Alex Payne <a...@twitter.com> wrote:
> > > > >>http://blog.twitter.com/2009/04/whats-deal-with-oauth.html
> >
> > > > >> In short: there's a security issue with OAuth, and the major OAuth
> > > > >> providers are working together to patch the vulnerability before
> > > > >> information about the issue is publicly released. That information
> > > > >> will be available athttp://oauth.net/atmidnight, PST.
> >
> > > > >> In cooperation with this consortium of other OAuth providers
> > > > >> (including Yahoo!, Google, Netflix, etc.), we agreed not to
> disclose
> > > > >> the nature of the vulnerability, nor even that a vulnerability
> > > > >> existed, until all members of the group agreed to do so. I
> apologize
> > > > >> for what must have seemed unnecessarily tight-lipped communication
> > > > >> around this issue, but please understand that we and the other
> > > > >> companies involved are trying to mitigate the impact of this
> > > > >> vulnerability as much as possible.
> >
> > > > >> Please also note that our OAuth support is in beta, albeit public
> > > > >> beta. We have not suggested to developers that they rely solely on
> > > > >> OAuth until our support of the standard leaves beta. I know that
> some
> > > > >> companies practice a policy of "perpetual beta", but at Twitter,
> we do
> > > > >> not. For us, "beta" really means "still in testing, not suitable
> for
> > > > >> production use".
> >
> > > > >> Thanks for your patience and understanding.
> >
> > > > >> --
> > > > >> Alex Payne - API Lead, Twitter, Inc.http://twitter.com/al3x
> >
> > > > --
> > > > Alex Payne - API Lead, Twitter, Inc.http://twitter.com/al3x- Hide
> quoted text -
> >
> > - Show quoted text -
>



-- 
Abraham Williams | http://the.hackerconundrum.com
Hacker | http://abrah.am | http://twitter.com/abraham
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