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List of notable OAuth service providers. Service provider OAuth protocol OpenID Connect Amazon: ... GitHub: 2.0 [20] No GitLab: 2.0 [21] Yes [22] Goodreads: 1.0 ...
OAuth is unrelated to OATH, which is a reference architecture for authentication, not a standard for authorization. However, OAuth is directly related to OpenID Connect (OIDC), since OIDC is an authentication layer built on top of OAuth 2.0. OAuth is also unrelated to XACML, which is an authorization policy standard. OAuth can be used in ...
XMPP, XMPP extensions [25] Alpha OpenMicroBlogger User-toggleable "apps" to add/remove functionality. RSSCloud and partial OStatus (PubSubHubbub) federation as well as Open Microblogging 0.1. Local follow/unfollow. Facebook, Twitter, Flickr integration. (partial) Twitter API support. Fully Restful design, user interface consumes Rest API ...
SAML 1.1/2.0, OAuth 2.0, WS-Federation, OpenID Connect, Kerberos cidaas [17] cidaas by Widas ID GmbH Commercial SAML 2.0, OAuth2, OpenID Connect Citrix Open Cloud [18] Citrix: Commercial SSO Middleware, native service connectors Cloud Identity Manager: McAfee: Commercial SAML 2, OpenID, OAuth, XACML, LDAP v3, JM Cloud Federation Service [19 ...
Token Binding is an evolution of the Transport Layer Security Channel ID (previously known as Transport Layer Security – Origin Bound Certificates (TLS-OBC)) extension. Industry participation is widespread with standards contributors including Microsoft, [2] Google, [3] PayPal, Ping Identity, and Yubico. Browser support remains limited, however.
The OpenSocial Foundation has integrated or supported various Open Web technologies, including OAuth and OAuth 2.0, Activity Streams, and Portable Contacts. Since its inception on November 1, 2007, [ 1 ] applications that implement the OpenSocial APIs can interoperate with any social network system that supports them.
User-Managed Access (UMA) is an OAuth-based access management protocol standard for party-to-party authorization. [1] Version 1.0 of the standard was approved by the Kantara Initiative on March 23, 2015.
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] [2] [3]