Hi Allen,
Thanks.  Incidentally, the grief I have with Facebook is that I have to
visit Facebook in order to pick up my "mail" which may just be a poke or
prod.  *grumble*  But yes, I'd like to see us provide a general solution.
 And my personal queuing SP of choice would likely be one that sends copies
of my messages in the email it sends me, as well as organizes them within
its own web site for my review later.

And yes, certainly some sites definitely have more use cases for email that
this solution doesn't address, like the social networking sites, I agree.
Although I hope we can find a way besides giving these social networking
sites access to spam our friends to make these connections with others
already using the service.

--
Andrew Arnott
"I [may] not agree with what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death
your right to say it." - Voltaire


On Mon, Apr 6, 2009 at 11:51 AM, Allen Tom <a...@yahoo-inc.com> wrote:

>  Hi Andrew,
>
> I really like the idea of an OAuth protected messaging service that
> protects the user's inbox from spam, and allows users to selectively
> authorize (and revoke) permission for 3rd parties to send messages to them.
> This is exactly why Facebook messaging is free of spam.
>
> As George has mentioned, this will take awhile time to roll out, but it
> would certainly make sense to move forward on this.
>
> However, a huge gotcha is that many RPs require your email address for more
> than just messaging purposes:
>
> For instance, if the user needs to contact the RP out of band (the RP is an
> online merchant, and the user needs to email or telephone the merchant
> regarding an order) the user will have no way to identify himself to the
> merchant, unless the merchant has the user's verified email address. The
> Googlers on this list might have a bit more to say about this scenario
> regarding their experience with Google Checkout.
>
> On a related note, social networking sites want users to connect with each
> other, and the best way for a user to find someone that they know is to
> search based on email addresses. This is why all decently sized social
> networking sites ask to import your address book from your mail provider to
> help you find your friends in your address book who are also using the site.
>
> Allen
>
> Andrew Arnott wrote:
>
>
>  Proposed solution:
>
>    1. When a user logs into an RP using an OpenID, the RP performs
>    discovery on the user's XRDS document and discovers a service element for
>    push notifications that includes the URI to receive the messages the RP
>    wishes to send to the user.  This element also includes information the RP
>    needs to use OAuth for authorization to send to this message queue.
>    2. During authentication (if the OP is also providing the message queue
>    service for the user) or immediately following authentication (if the user
>    is using a separate message queuing service), the RP sends an OAuth message
>    to the queuing SP requesting authorization to post messages to this user.
>     The user is directed to a web page explaining the RP wants to send 
> messages
>    and clicks "Accept".
>    3. The user is now logged into the RP.
>
> When the RP wants to send messages to the user, it POSTs to the queuing SP
> using its OAuth token.
> The user receives these messages in a manner previously configured with his
> queuing SP, which will typically be via email forwarding to his inbox.
>
>
>
> >
>

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