From a31d6ab1b9ca061b565d976f754c11b1bef7a325 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "http://blipvert.myopenid.com/" Date: Wed, 22 Sep 2010 20:10:26 +0000 Subject: --- doc/news/openid/discussion.mdwn | 5 ++++- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'doc/news') diff --git a/doc/news/openid/discussion.mdwn b/doc/news/openid/discussion.mdwn index fa8acb942..a79a87989 100644 --- a/doc/news/openid/discussion.mdwn +++ b/doc/news/openid/discussion.mdwn @@ -82,5 +82,8 @@ which fails here? Or is something broken in Ikiwiki's implementation? Yes. I'd only recently set up my server as a delegate under wordpress, so still thought that perhaps the issue was on my end. But I'd since used my delegate successfully elsewhere, so I filed it as a bug against ikiwiki. ---- -##Pretty Painless +###Pretty Painless I just tried logging it with OpenID and it Just Worked. Pretty painless. If you want to turn off password authentication on ikiwiki.info, I say go for it. --[[blipvert]] + +###LiveJournal openid +One caveat to the above is that, of course, OpenID is a distributed trust system which means you do have to think about the trust aspect. A case in point is livejournal.com whose OpenID implementation is badly broken in one important respect: If a LiveJournal user deletes his or her journal, and a different user registers a journal with the same name (this is actually quite a common occurrence on LiveJournal), they in effect inherit the previous journal owner's identity. LiveJournal does not even have a mechanism in place for a remote site even to detect that a journal has changed hands. It is an extremely dodgy situation which they seem to have *no* intention of fixing, and the bottom line is that the "identity" represented by a *username*.livejournal.com token should not be trusted as to its long-term uniqueness. Just FYI. --[[blipvert]] -- cgit v1.2.3