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- OAuth 2. 0 — OAuth
OAuth 2 0 OAuth 2 0 is the industry-standard protocol for authorization OAuth 2 0 focuses on client developer simplicity while providing specific authorization flows for web applications, desktop applications, mobile phones, and living room devices This specification and its extensions are being developed within the IETF OAuth Working Group OAuth 2 1 is an in-progress effort to consolidate
- Getting Started — OAuth
Getting Started Below are some guides to OAuth 2 0 which cover many of the topics needed to understand and implement clients and servers OAuth 2 0 Simplified OAuth 2 0 Simplified, written by Aaron Parecki, is a guide to OAuth 2 0 focused on writing clients that gives a clear overview of the spec at an introductory level Roles: Applications, APIs and Users Creating an App Authorization
- OAuth Community Site
An open protocol to allow secure authorization in a simple and standard method from web, mobile and desktop applications Learn more about OAuth 2 0 »
- End User Authentication with OAuth 2. 0 — OAuth
User Authentication with OAuth 2 0 The OAuth 2 0 specification defines a delegation protocol that is useful for conveying authorization decisions across a network of web-enabled applications and APIs OAuth is used in a wide variety of applications, including providing mechanisms for user authentication This has led many developers and API providers to incorrectly conclude that OAuth is
- Specs — OAuth
OAuth Working Group Specifications Current active drafts in the OAuth working group Active Drafts
- Client Authentication - OAuth 2. 0
RFC 6749 Section 2 3: OAuth 2 0 Client Authentication rfc-editor org rfc rfc6749#section-2 3 Confidential clients authenticate when making requests to the OAuth
- OAuth 2. 0 Security Best Current Practice
RFC 9700: OAuth 2 0 Security Best Current Practice datatracker ietf org doc html rfc9700 OAuth 2 0 Security Best Current Practice describes security requirements and
- OAuth 2. 1
OAuth 2 1 datatracker ietf org doc html draft-ietf-oauth-v2-1-13 OAuth 2 1 is an in-progress effort to consolidate and simplify the most commonly used features of
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