5 Comments
- theone3, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Sounds horribly insecure. I get how it works, but it just sounds like there's too many failure points.
- grrreat, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1Couldn't Google's Authentication web service be used the same way?
http://code.google.com/apis/accounts/AuthForWebApps.html - seweso, on 10/12/2007, -0/+1It works! I can now identify myself with seweso.com, i only needed to add the folowing lines of code to my blogger.com template:
<link rel="openid.server" href="http://www.myopenid.com/server" />
<link rel="openid.delegate" href="http://seweso.myopenid.com/">
Very cool indeed :D, now we just need more sites to use it. And it seems to be pretty secure, my site says that i trust myopenid.com with my identity, when i login the first time to something.com i am redirected to myopenid.com and they ask if I trust something.com with my identity. That's it!
Sweet! - brianellin, on 10/12/2007, -0/+0More OpenID technology and code at:
http://www.openidenabled.com/ - seweso, on 10/12/2007, -1/+1Digg is ***** up, why do i need to enter < and >? And why is my comment suddenly submitted when i am still editing it? Aaargh! Irritating...


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