IndieAuth
Decentralized authentication protocol using OAuth 2.0
IndieAuth is an open standard decentralized authentication protocol that uses OAuth 2.0 and enables services to verify the identity of a user represented by a URL, as well as to obtain an access token, that can be used to access resources under the control of the user.[1]
IndieAuth is developed in the IndieWeb community and was published as a W3C Note.[1] It was published as a W3C Note by the Social Web Working Group due to lacking the time needed to formally progress it to a W3C recommendation, despite having several interoperable implementations.[2]
Implementations
- WordPress IndieAuth Plugin[3]
- Known[4]
- Micro.blog[5]
- Grav (CMS) IndieAuth Plugin[6]
- Drupal IndieWeb Plugin[7]
- Cellar Door[8]
See also
- OpenID
- WebID
References
- ^ a b "IndieAuth". World Wide Web Consortium. 2018-01-23. Retrieved 2018-07-16.
- ^ Lagally, Michael; McCool, Michael (2022-01-08). "IoT Interoperability with W3C Web of Things". 2022 IEEE 19th Annual Consumer Communications & Networking Conference (CCNC). IEEE. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1109/ccnc49033.2022.9700546. ISBN 978-1-6654-3161-3. S2CID 246753985.
- ^ "IndieAuth".
- ^ "Home". indieauth.net.
- ^ "Manton Reece - IndieAuth for Micro.blog". 2 July 2018.
- ^ "IndieAuth Plugin". GitHub. 21 March 2021.
- ^ "IndieWeb". 13 March 2018.
- ^ "Glitch: The friendly community where everyone builds the web".
External links
- IndieAuth specification
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standards
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- International World Wide Web Conference (IW3C)
- Steering Committee (IW3C2)
- First conference ("WWW1", 1994)
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