Skip to main content
5 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Jan 8 at 9:03 comment added rene @U.Windl the answer would still be: [Universal Login] used to work across all domains owned by SE, but security and privacy concerns made that stricter handling of cookies by the major browsers broke that functionality.. You're free to dislike that today, but I'm not sure that they could have foreshadowed this breakage back in 2015. I'll give you that if they sticked with/ expanded use of their server for OpenId and/or added OpenIdConnect ; oAuth they woulldn't have been in this mess today. Hindsight makes things easy.
Jan 8 at 8:25 comment added U. Windl I think it's rather interesting that the "Universal Login" is restricted to one DNS domain (server). What's universal about it then? Isn't it a plain site login, then? -- Actually I'm afraid that most users do not care, because they use some external authentication provider (Like Google). -- Maybe my question should have been as simple as "Why does single-sign-on work nicely with (e.g.) Google (e.g.), but not for SE?"
Jan 4 at 21:10 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 4.0
Active reading [<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID>]. Added some context.
Jan 4 at 11:52 history edited rene CC BY-SA 4.0
deleted 1 character in body
Jan 4 at 10:48 history answered rene CC BY-SA 4.0