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  1. blogs.gnome.org

    In my previous article on OpenID 2.0, I mentioned the new Attribute Exchange extension. To me this is one of the more interesting benefits of moving to OpenID 2.0, so it deserves a more in depth look. As mentioned previously, the extension is a way of transferring information about the user between the OpenID provider and relying party.
  2. OpenID Attribute Exchange 1.0 - Draft 08. TOC : Implementor's Draft ... [OpenID.axschema] (Hardt, D., "Schema for OpenID Attribute Exchange," May 2007.) outlines an example ... less than or the exact number of values speficied by this field for the associated attribute, but MUST NOT return more than the number of requested values for the ...
  3. factoryjoe.com

    One of the many promises of OpenID is the ability to more easily federate profile information from an identity provider to secondary consumer applications. A simple example of this is when you fill out a basic personal profile on a new social network: if you've ever typed your name, birthday, address and your dog's name into a form, why on earth would you ever have to type it again?
  4. OpenID Attribute Exchange ([OpenID.attribute‑exchange‑1.0] (Hardt, D. and B. Ferg, "OpenID Attribute Exchange," August 2006.)) is a service for OpenID ([OpenID.authentication‑2.0] (Recordon, D., Hoyt, J., and B. Fitzpatrick, "OpenID Authentication 2.0 - Draft 08," August 2006.)) that enables transport of personal identity ...
  5. stackoverflow.com

    Attribute Exchange is much more extensible and featureful, although I suspect in practice features like the update_url and store request have not been widely implemented. As for knowing which to request: In theory, which extensions a provider supports is documented in the XRDS document available during the discovery phase, as noted in the ...
  6. iiw.idcommons.net

    Introduce the concept of more generic schema for sending/requesting properties about attributes. Class: The new attribute property schemas attach to specific attribute types. Each attribute property schema is bound to a unique attribute-type namespace, can be described by a standard key string (does not need to be defined through a URL value).
  7. blog.nerdbank.net

    DotNetOpenId supports OpenID extensions, but does not provide samples for using any except the Simple Registration extension. Since the Attribute Exchange extension (AX) was added recently, which is more extensible and generally usable than Simple Registration, sites using OpenID should consider using this extension, perhaps in addition to Simple Registration, to ease your web visitor's new ...
  8. OpenID Attribute Exchange is an OpenID extension, and thus uses OpenID Authentication request and response messages for exchanging attributes. See the "Security Considerations" section of [OpenID.authentication‑2.0] ( Recordon, D., Hoyt, J., Fitzpatrick, B., and D. Hardt, "OpenID Authentication 2.0 - Draft 11," January 2007.
  9. maisonbisson.com

    ☰Menu IdM, OpenID, and Attribute Exchange Mar 25, 2007 #attribute exchange #identity management #idm #libraries #marc canter #openid The conversation on Code4Lib about OpenID reminded me to finish a draft I'd started at Identity Future on the topic.. The short of it is that Marc Canter says that single sign-on is good, but "we need the attribute exchange to make this thing really take ...
  10. blogs.gnome.org

    In my previous article on OpenID 2.0, I mentioned the new Attribute Exchange extension. To me this is one of the more interesting benefits of moving to OpenID 2.0, so it deserves a more in depth look. As mentioned previously, the extension is a way of transferring information about the user between the OpenID provider and relying party.

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