On Wed, Nov 7, 2018 at 7:20 AM Joseph Heenan <jos...@authlete.com> wrote:
> It may be worth slightly rewording 7.2 as it may encourage a growing > misconception that all native apps must be public clients. With many > devices now having embedded HSMs, we’ve seen increasing interest in mobile > apps being dynamically (per-install) registered oauth2 private clients, and > that model has a lot of advantages. (I’m not sure if we might see a similar > model evolving for web apps.) > That's a great point, thanks. I've removed the reference to native apps being public clients since it doesn't really add anything to this spec if I have to caveat the description. On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 12:58 PM Torsten Lodderstedt < tors...@lodderstedt.net> wrote: > > First of all the AS decides whether it issues refresh tokens or not. > Having the ability does not mean the AS must do it. If you feel it’s safer > to not do it. Fine. > > Sure, and this should be mentioned then somewhere (either in the threats > doc or in this proposed best practice doc). Not all end developers using > these protocols fully understand the ramifications. > @Aaron: I suggest this goes to the SPA BCP since this is client specific. Thanks, I agree that this document should include some recommendations around refresh token handling. Looking at the discussion in this thread, it seems there are a few different strategies folks are taking. Since it seems like there isn't a strong consensus, it sounds like this would be better suited for the "Security Considerations" section, and to not make MUST/SHOULD recommendations, but rather just point out the issues. Any thoughts on that before I take a stab at writing something? I've incorporated some of the other feedback here and published an updated version: https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-parecki-oauth-browser-based-apps-01 Thanks for the feedback so far. --- Aaron Parecki https://aaronparecki.com
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