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WebFinger

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WebFinger is a protocol specified by the Internet Engineering Task Force IETF that allows for discovery of information about people and things identified by a URI.[1] Information about a person might be discovered via an "acct:" URI, for example, which is a URI that looks like an email address.

WebFinger is specified as the discovery protocol for OpenID Connect,[2] which is a protocol that allows one to more easily log in to various sites on the Internet.[3]

The WebFinger protocol is used by the federated social networks StatusNet[4] and Diaspora[5] to discover users on federated nodes and pods as well as the remoteStorage protocol.[6]

As a historical note, the name "WebFinger" is derived from the old ARPANET Finger protocol, but is a very different protocol designed for HTTP.[7]

See Also

References

  1. ^ Jones, Paul E.; Salgueiro, Gonzalo; Jones, Michael B.; Smarr, Joseph (September 2013). "RFC 7033: WebFinger".
  2. ^ OpenID Connect Discovery 1.0
  3. ^ Welcome to OpenID Connect
  4. ^ Evan Prodromou Speaks on the Future of StatusNet
  5. ^ How Diaspora Connects Users
  6. ^ remoteStorage protocol draft at the IETF website.
  7. ^ Introducing WebFinger