Thinking about this, given that this is the *token* endpoint that clients talk to directly, not the *authorize* endpoint, it seems already possible for the AS to put it on a different port/host so that users aren’t ever prompted for a cert. Right?
— Neil > On 7 Jan 2019, at 17:21, Brian Campbell <bcampb...@pingidentity.com> wrote: > > I don't honestly know for sure but I suspect that employees of big > corporations will likely have keys/certs on their devices/machines that are > issued by some internal CA and provisioned to them automatically (and in many > cases without the user knowing and/or understanding that they are there and > why). Those users would likely be prompted when TLS handshaking with a server > that presents an empty list of CAs in the certificate_authorities of the > CertificateRequest. > > I dunno. Maybe I was too quick to retract the proposal for the MTLS > supporting secondary token endpoint? > > What do folks (including Ben & Neil) think? > >> On Fri, Jan 4, 2019 at 2:55 PM Benjamin Kaduk <ka...@mit.edu> wrote: >> On Fri, Dec 28, 2018 at 03:55:15PM -0700, Brian Campbell wrote: >> > I >> > suspect that not having client certs set up is the situation for the vast >> > majority of users and their browsers. And for those that do have client >> >> Is this still true when we limit to the set of users/browsers that are >> employees of big corporations? >> >> -Ben >> >> > certs set up, I think they are more likely to be the kind of user that is >> > able to deal with the UI prompt okay. > > CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This email may contain confidential and privileged > material for the sole use of the intended recipient(s). Any review, use, > distribution or disclosure by others is strictly prohibited. If you have > received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately by > e-mail and delete the message and any file attachments from your computer. > Thank you.
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