Hot answers tagged authentication
81
I'm going to provide more than just the technical details here, as I think there are alot of implicit assumptions about global login that aren't quite correct out there.
Accordingly, this is going to be really long.
Design Requirements
A user having logged into any SE-site will be automatically logged into every other SE-site on which they have an ...
17
You can log into any Stack Exchange site using the credentials from any Open ID provider. Unfortunately, at this time, GitHub is not an Open ID provider, so you can't log in using those credentials.
Also, it's highly unlikely that SE would create a special login mechanism for GitHub accounts unless there was great incentive to do so; it would require ...
16
I'm not sure I understand why you have a problem with the current behaviour. That you can use the StackExchange account as an OpenID provider for other sites is an entirely optional feature. You can just never authorize any other site to use the SE OpenID account, you need to explicitly grant a site permission to use your OpenID account.
Many other big ...
15
They are using HTML 5 Local Storage. Jeff happened to publish a blog article just today, describing what happens behind the scenes:
Stack Overflow Blog: Global Network Auto-Login
12
Can one take any additional security measures?
Yeah - set up two-factor authentication for Google. Then someone has to steal your phone and your password to get into your Stack Overflow account.
(Also worth noting here - because this comes up all the time - that SE doesn't get access to anything on your Google account; Google tells us your email ...
12
Well... none, I think. If you are having a problem logging into Facebook, nobody on SE can help you. You'll need to tell Facebook about your problem directly, and ask them for help.
SE isn't for reporting bugs in software or web sites, it's about getting answers to your questions; and "I can't log in" is definitely not a question.
If, on the other hand, ...
12
An error message that tells you if your user name was invalid cannot decrease the security if there are other ways of confirming the existence of a username, such as a public username list, or the registration form rejecting existing usernames.
If those other ways exist, the clearer error message is preferable, since it makes life easier for legitimate ...
12
I don't think creating an SSO-capable account without informing the user is inherently wrong. It's also very common; Google, Facebook, Yahoo! and others have done the same, often retroactively. Your remark "For potentially thousands of websites?" makes me suspect you may misunderstand how the Stack Exchange OpenID works: you will only be automatically logged ...
11
For some time I figured that your last bullet,
See the login unexpectedly succeed, without entering any email address or Stack Exchange password!
...implied that you did not do anything to initiate the login.
But, as your penultimate bullet states: you actually clicked one of the OpenID buttons, which makes Stack Overflow (or any other SE site, ...
8
I believe that the reason for this is because it's accessing HTML5 LocalStorage. Details are available in the blog post. But basically, it's using JavaScript to check for other valid logins, so it can't be done Server Side.
I'm not 100% clear on this however... But this is why I believe this. From the blog post:
So, we gave up on using third-party ...
7
Arjan points out that logging in requires you to explicitly select an OpenID provider1. This is true, but this is not made obvious to the user. Consider a user who is not particularly tech-savvy nor familiar with the concept of single sign-on (except for that one time they used Twitter to login to yfrog). This may or may not represent a typical current user, ...
7
This isn't necessarily a solution but it is a work-around that may be helpful for others. There are 5 possible Proxy settings in Firefox (11.0):
No proxy
Auto-detect
Use system proxy settings
Manual proxy configuration
Automatic proxy configuration URL
I was seeing the issues with both System proxy settings and Automatic proxy URL. When I set the proxy ...
7
It's possible. Head over to your profile -> Click on My Logins -> Add More Logins. Now select Google, and proceed to login to Google with the preferred Google profile. This will be added to Stack Exchange as one of the available logins
As Rebecca mentions in below comment: Ensure you logout of your Google Accounts first!
7
it's a pain to have to log out of each one individually, especially since you get logged right back in by the auto-login across sites feature if you go back to a site
Clicking "log out everywhere" clears HTML5 local storage and prevents that auto-login from happening.
it does not, and cannot, log you out across domains. Otherwise I could somehow ...
6
This seems to be unrelated to Stack Exchange OpenId in particular. I've tried several OpenId providers (Stack Exchange, a delegated version, MyOpenId, Blogger, and Wordpress); Disqus gives me that error message you encountered for all of them.
The way you've tried should work.
5
That statement means exactly what you've just observed: if you log in with a provider that gives us an email address (and that Stack Exchange trusts enough to believe the email that's provided is yours), you can log in with any other trusted authentication provider that provides us with the same email.
The key there is that SE has to trust your provider to ...
4
It's been found that proper error messages significantly reduce login failures. If you don't tell the user their email address isn't even valid they're much more likely to have login failures. This is a significant usability problem.
Security-wise, I don't buy the risk. The true risk comes from:
People who already know your credentials (you're screwed)
...
4
This was an issue with the infrastructure that's responsible for the data exchange between all the different sites in the network.
Don't ask me for details, I have no idea at all how that thing works.
But either way, Kevin has fixed it. Some users who recently changed their data (in particular their OpenId, like in this case) may still have some issues for ...
4
I think it is a good idea. As long as your browser is secure there is no problem. This is exactly what OpenID was meant to be: a way for you to choose your security level.
I have thought about setting up my own OpenID provider which could log me in automatically for example if I'm on my home computer. Other means of authorization may be to require a ...
3
The Stack Exchange Network (Relying Party, RP), before any kind of logout, should ask whether logging out from the current OpenID Provider (OP) is also desired, as suggested in mailing list, 'openid-general' by an Andrew Arnott here: http://lists.openid.net/pipermail/openid-general/2009-April/017856.html and by someone else here : ...
3
There is a user cookie with 3 values stored in it. I suspect that when the user is authenticated through OpenId, the SO backend creates a ticket (much like typical forms authentication) and the name of the ticket is stored in this cookie instead.
For meta, the cookie is named somuser and is different because meta.stackoverflow.com has access to the cookies ...
3
Technorati is no longer listed on the OpenId site: http://openid.net/get-an-openid/
There is an open question at Technorati's own support site with this question: http://getsatisfaction.com/technorati/topics/openid_support_has_disappeared_is_it_coming_back
The site supports openId login and you cannot login to it using Technorati as your openId provider.
...
3
Already done here
http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/31021/what-openid-providers-should-we-feature-on-the-login-page
3
Solved from the comment left by e19293001 which pointed to this: Firefox asks for proxy details, but only when accessing facebook Now able to access SO without those annoying popups!
2
You can add a new Yahoo login by going to your user profile page and clicking on the "my logins" link on the top right (below the Ask Question button). This will bring up a dialog listing your current logins. There's an "add more logins..." link on the bottom left of that dialog. Once you add a new login you can just stop using the old one or remove it.
2
This year old article is stating some statistics about federated identity usage on a few sites including Stackoverflow.
Quoting from link: http://social.venturebeat.com/2009/04/14/single-sign-on-service-openid-getting-more-usage/
Sulit.com.ph (a Filipino e-commerce
site): 15% of new registrations are
via OpenID, up from 10% a couple of
months ago
...
2
Ah, after googling muchly, I think these may be series and token identifiers, as described in http://jaspan.com/improved_persistent_login_cookie_best_practice.
Each is a base64-encoded 128-bit (presumably random) number, with the trailing == removed.
2
With the growth in the number of StackExchange sites the merits of a unified login system are growing as well.
Eventually, logging into StackOverflow will cause you to be logged into, say, Cooking too. All of this is conditioned on you already having an account on both sites.
We've already taken steps in this direction by unifying logins between parent ...
2
A fix for this will go out with the next build (exact timing dependent on when the database move is completed).
There was a rather subtle bug around adding new identifiers if both identifiers were known to verify e-mail addresses (for instance, Google and Facebook are both trusted; MyOpenId is not).
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