I don't normally do "web programming", but now that I have to do some of it, I have to ask: how did this end up being the security standard? (OAuth 2.0, example from PayPal's API)pic.twitter.com/nHXqajAiej
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Ideally you want the least possible footprint to have to run encrypted, an OAuth 2.0 seems to require that you run effectively everything encrypted, because all points in the pipeline need to pass the entire (unencrypted) security information up until TLS encode.
You want to protect your clients against data center employees? Hahahahahahahaha
Hahaahahahahahahhhaha
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