Hi all,

Now that the Easter holiday is over, please review the following
revised OAuth charter and provide feedback by May 5th (one week from
today). Thanks!


Description of Working Group

The Open Web Authentication (OAuth) protocol allows a user to grant
a third-party Web site or application access to the user's protected
resources, without necessarily revealing their long-term credentials,
or even their identity. For example, a photo-sharing site that supports
OAuth could allow its users to use a third-party printing Web site to
print their private pictures, without allowing the printing site to
gain full control of the user's account.

OAuth consists of
* a mechanism for a user to authorize issuance of credentials that
  a third party can use to access resources on the user's behalf and
* a mechanism for using the issued credentials to authenticate
  HTTP requests.

In April 2010 the OAuth 1.0 specifcation, documenting pre-IETF work,
was published as an informational document (RFC 5849). The working
group has since been developing OAuth 2.0, a standards-track version
that will reflect IETF consensus.  Version 2.0 will consider the
implementation experience with version 1.0, and will
* improve the terminology used,
* consider broader use cases,
* embody good security practices,
* improve interoperability, and
* provide guidelines for extensibility.

The working group will develop authentication schemes for
peers/servers taking part in OAuth (accessing protected resources).
This includes

* an HMAC-based authentication mechanism [to the extent that the
OAuth wg produces specifications that could be used more generally
for HTTP authentication, the WG will work with the security and
applications area directors to ensure that this work gets appropriate
review, e.g. via additional last calls in other relevant working groups
such as httpbis],

* a specification for access protected by Transport Layer Security
(bearer tokens),

* an extension to OAuth 2.0 to allow access tokens to be
  requested when a client is in possession of a SAML assertion.

A separate informational description will be produced to provide
additional security analysis for audiences beyond the community
protocol implementers.

Milestones will be added for the later items after the near-term work
has been completed.

Goals and Milestones
May 2011    Submit 'HTTP Authentication: MAC Authentication' as a
working group item

May 2011    Submit 'OAuth 2.0 Threat Model and Security Considerations'
as a working group item

Jul 2011    Submit 'The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Protocol' to the
IESG for consideration as a Proposed Standard

Jul 2011    Submit 'HTTP Authentication: MAC Authentication' to the
IESG for consideration as a Proposed Standard

Aug 2011    Submit 'The OAuth 2.0 Protocol: Bearer Tokens' to the
IESG for consideration as a Proposed Standard

Oct 2011    Submit 'SAML 2.0 Bearer Assertion Grant Type Profile for
OAuth 2.0' to the IESG for consideration as a Proposed Standard

Nov 2011    Prepare re-chartering
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