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Aaron Parecki

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  • Aaron Parecki
    My 2017 in review megapost: https://aaronparecki.com/2018/01/04/6/year-in-review-2017
    Portland, Oregon, USA • 39°F
    12 likes 4 replies
    Fri, Jan 5, 2018 10:08am -08:00
  • samim http://www.samim.io/
    It's 2018, and new "decentralised / indieweb" projects are still mostly using highly technical jargon / feature descriptions in their advertising & messaging. This has never, and will never work. Talk about values, design and experience instead and people might actually listen.
    Portland, Oregon • 40°F
    Fri, Jan 5, 2018 6:57pm +01:00 (liked on Fri, Jan 5, 2018 9:58am -08:00)
  • https://twitter.com/stickermule
    Aaron Parecki
    @stickermule What happened to the @stickermarket? The site just redirects to the home page now! https://www.stickermule.com/marketplace
    Portland, Oregon, USA • 44°F
    1 like
    Thu, Jan 4, 2018 2:28pm -08:00
  • Jesse Holden 2018 http://www.jesseholden.com
    One more for good measure @spy30hq @SprocketPodcast @junicornmedic @nuggit
    Portland, Oregon • 42°F
    1 mention
    Sat, Jul 8, 2017 2:14pm -08:00 (liked on Thu, Jan 4, 2018 11:01am -08:00) #spy30
  • Rick Holland https://www.digitalshadows.com/author/rick-holland/
    I know we are “all processor vulns all the time right now” but don’t forget .@CES 2018 is coming & bringing with it both vulnerable #IoT devices & ridiculous AND vulnerable IoT devices. Example from last year - smart hair brushes. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/03/technology/personaltech/ces-2018.html
    Portland, Oregon • 40°F
    Thu, Jan 4, 2018 9:38am -06:00 (liked on Thu, Jan 4, 2018 7:50am -08:00) #IoT
  • Carol Nichols http://carol-nichols.com
    ┏┓
    ┃┃╱╲ in
    ┃╱╱╲╲ this
    ╱╱╭╮╲╲house
    ▔▏┗┛▕▔ we
    ╱▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔▔╲
    use ISO 8601
    ╱╱┏┳┓╭╮┏┳┓ ╲╲
    ▔▏┗┻┛┃┃┗┻┛▕▔

    Happy 2018-01-01!
    Portland, Oregon • 41°F
    Mon, Jan 1, 2018 8:38pm -05:00 (liked on Wed, Jan 3, 2018 5:40pm -08:00)
  • Aaron Parecki
    The Apple Park Visitor Center is pretty neat. I do wish it was two floors taller so it had a better view of the space ship tho
    Apple Park Visitor Center in Cupertino, California, USA
    11 likes
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 12:33pm -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    Neat #AugmentedReality demo of the new Apple Park building. Pointing the iPad at the scale model on the table shows an animated overlay of what it looks like inside!
    Apple Park Visitor Center in Cupertino, California, USA
    10 likes 2 replies
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 12:32pm -08:00 #augmentedreality
  • Paul Frazee✌️ http://pfrazee.hashbase.io   •   Jan 3
    That provides a practical solution to spam. You have to be in the recipient's network to reach them.
    Aaron Parecki
    That sounds similar to Vouch, a Webmention extension https://indieweb.org/Vouch Would love your thoughts on that.
    San Jose, California, USA • 52°F
    1 like 1 reply
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 9:47am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Gate 28
    San Jose, California • Wed, January 3, 2018 9:40am
    37.364393 -121.923909
    San Jose, California
    8 Coins
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 9:40am -08:00
  • Zegnat https://github.com/Zegnat   •   Jan 3

    #12 Specify RelMeAuth as fallback.

    Aaron Parecki

    This spec intentionally doesn't specify how users authenticate themselves to their server, it only deals with how third-party clients can authenticate users where their domain name is their identity.

    The analogous version of this in RelMeAuth, with Google as an example, is such: as far as the RelMeAuth client is concerned, it sends the user over to Google, and expects Google to handle authenticating the user. This might involve entering their password, optionally followed by a 2fa mechanism like a Yubikey or TOTP code. That is all invisible to the site they're logging in to.

    Similarly, IndieAuth clients do not know how users authenticate to their own server, the client just expects to send them off to the authorization endpoint and get back a response later that can be verified.

    It is not a good idea for a spec to require any sort of authentication mechanism between the user and their own authorization server, which is something that the OAuth 2.0 spec has also made clear.

    Now, the rest of this conversation is essentially continuing the naming debate of indieauth.com vs IndieAuth the spec vs other options we've considered.

    I agree with many of @tantek's points, like

    ... should be it "just works" even if you only setup rel=me

    However, that is describing RelMeAuth, not this spec. And as @Zegnat pointed out, even just adding rel=me isn't necessarily going to guarantee that you can sign in to an arbitrary site that supports RelMeAuth, since you need to add a rel=me link to a service that the site you're signing in to supports, which requires that site to register an OAuth application and deal with that service's API.

    I'm in the middle of renaming indieauth.com, the goal is that the wiki will redirect users to indielogin.com to authenticate them using the existing mechanisms: RelMeAuth, email, PGP, and IndieAuth. Nowhere in that flow will users see the term "IndieAuth" unless they include a rel=authorization_endpoint link on their website to an IndieAuth server of their choosing.

    I definitely agree that signing in to the wiki needs to be as simple as possible. That's the reason I added so many OAuth providers as well as alternate methods to indieauth.com (soon indielogin.com) in the first place. We've even had some people who want to sign in to the wiki but don't have a Twitter or GitHub account and don't want one, which is why I added things like email and PGP authentication options, which were not described by RelMeAuth.

    This is all to say that it's not the goal of this spec to include RelMeAuth. This spec is intended to be just the URL-based extension to OAuth 2.0. If "IndieAuth" is not the right name for this spec, that's a different issue.

    San Jose, California, USA • 52°F
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 9:16am -08:00 #indieauth
  • Angelina Fabbro https://twitter.com/hopefulcyborg
    FOLKS I have a new favorite image recognition edge case sent to me by @Esquiring

    I give you KITTEN or CARAMEL SWIRL ICE CREAM
    San Jose, California • 52°F
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 1:41pm -08:00 (liked on Wed, Jan 3, 2018 9:02am -08:00)
  • Aaron Parecki
    at TSA Security
    San Jose, California • Wed, January 3, 2018 8:31am
    37.364906 -121.924157
    San Jose, California
    7 Coins
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 8:31am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Norman Y. Mineta San José International Airport (SJC)
    San Jose, California • Wed, January 3, 2018 8:28am
    37.366204 -121.928342
    San Jose, California
    6 Coins
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 8:28am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Springhill Suites by Marriort
    San Jose, California • Wed, January 3, 2018 7:10am
    37.366331 -121.914082
    San Jose, California • 47°F
    45 Coins
    Wed, Jan 3, 2018 7:10am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Springhill Suites by Marriort
    San Jose, California • Tue, January 2, 2018 10:06pm
    37.366331 -121.914082
    San Jose, California • 52°F
    1 Coin
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 10:06pm -08:00
  • Greg Hogben https://www.amazon.com/My-Daughters-Army-Greg-Hogben/dp/1634761928/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1510311177
    Perfectly timed photo captures the moment a flock of starlings took the shape of a giant bird.

    Photo by Daniel Bieber.
    San Jose, California • 56°F
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 4:13am -08:00 (liked on Tue, Jan 2, 2018 9:22pm -08:00)
  • Aaron Parecki
    at The Farmers Union
    San Jose, California • Tue, January 2, 2018 8:31pm
    37.33514 -121.89303
    San Jose, California • 56°F
    24 Coins
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 8:31pm -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Apple Inc.
    Cupertino, California • Tue, January 2, 2018 7:59pm
    37.334853 -122.011293
    Cupertino, California
    1 Coin
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 7:59pm -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Jack Rose Libation House
    Los Gatos, California • Tue, January 2, 2018 6:09pm
    37.240853 -122.001399
    Saratoga, California • 53°F
    42 Coins
    Tue, Jan 2, 2018 6:09pm -08:00
older

Hi, I'm Aaron Parecki, Director of Identity Standards at Okta, and co-founder of IndieWebCamp. I maintain oauth.net, write and consult about OAuth, and participate in the OAuth Working Group at the IETF. I also help people learn about video production and livestreaming. (detailed bio)

I've been tracking my location since 2008 and I wrote 100 songs in 100 days. I've spoken at conferences around the world about owning your data, OAuth, quantified self, and explained why R is a vowel. Read more.

  • Director of Identity Standards at Okta
  • IndieWebCamp Founder
  • OAuth WG Editor
  • OpenID Board Member

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