77 blog reactions to simonwillison.net/2006/Dec/19/openid/
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Who’s Ready for OpenID
Related Articles: How Not to use OpenID http://kswenson.wordpress.com/…/how-not-to-use-openid/ How to turn your blog in to an OpenID http://simonwillison.net/2006/Dec/19/openid/ Web 2.1: How OpenID will rescue Web 2.0 http://kswenson.wordpress.com/…how-openid-will-rescue-web-20/
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In The Woods Of Eryn Vorn
they already have an OpenID the overhead of logging in is small enough that I’m hopeful at least a few people will give it a go. As always, report any bugs in the comments. Update: I’ve created a screencast showing how to use OpenID. link
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Search Marketing Courses
86 days ago · Authority: 2If you would like to actually make your website your OpenID URL (as Simon referred to in his video), then check out this article by Simon (in particular, note section 2 of the article). Our second video is from Andrew of FlyPublishing.com. In it he shows you how to sign-in to websites using OpenID. Read the rest of this entry
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OpenID
Party can pre-fill some registration fields so that users don’t need to type the same information many times. Of course, Relying Party needs to convert information from OpenID provider to its own format. [Delegation] Delegation is also possible: http://simonwillison.net/2006/Dec/19/openid/. It means users may want to delegate their OpenID to another provider behind-the-scenes. An example from http://www.plaxo.com/api/openid_recipe: “If I try to sign up with the OpenID josephsmarr.com, I may have actually delegated that URL to a
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The Weekly Source Code 25 - OpenID Edition
How to turn your blog into an OpenID Simon Willison wrote How to turn your blog into an OpenID and it's very easy. STEP 1: Get an OpenID. There a lots of servers and services out there you can use. I use http://www.myopenid.com for two reasons. One, I know the CEO (they're in Portland), and two, they support optionally using CardSpace to
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The Weekly Source Code 25 - OpenID Edition
How to turn your blog into an OpenID Simon Willison wrote How to turn your blog into an OpenID and it's very easy. STEP 1: Get an OpenID. There a lots of servers and services out there you can use. I use http://www.myopenid.com for two reasons. One, I know the CEO (they're in Portland), and two, they support optionally using CardSpace to
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The Weekly Source Code 25 - OpenID Edition
How to turn your blog into an OpenID Simon Willison wrote How to turn your blog into an OpenID and it's very easy. STEP 1: Get an OpenID. There a lots of servers and services out there you can use. I use http://www.myopenid.com for two reasons. One, I know the CEO (they're in Portland), and two, they support optionally using CardSpace to
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OpenID @ http://www.plaxo.com/api/openid_recipe
(The reason you need to store the requested OpenID is that OpenID lets users delegate their OpenID to another provider behind-the-scenes. For instance, if I try to sign up with the OpenID josephsmarr.com, I may have actually delegated that URL to a different OpenID like jsmarr.myopenid.com, and when the provider returns to you to complete authentication, you need to remember that I wanted to sign up as josephsmarr.com and not jsmarr.myopenid.com. Luckily your OpenID library will
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Ce que nous devons savoir
112 days ago in Valoriser, sécuriser, simplifier les données personnelles sur internet by dynamianouveau · Authority: 3que l'URL appartient bien au compte OpenID correspondant au site. Son utilisation est encore plus simple : il ne nécessite que l'entrée de son URL personnel. Si vous voulez avoir un blog OpenID suivez les instructions de Simon Willison: How to turn your blog in to an OpenID
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Webz | Web news and reviews
Πηγές και Παραπομπές Using a Domain as Your OpenID How to turn your blog in to an OpenID OpenID for non-SuperUsers