Thank you so much Taylor! That's exactly the confirmation I was
seeking.. a big relief.

I'll check out the short cut on dev.twitter... much appreciated.

On Aug 20, 1:34 pm, Taylor Singletary <[email protected]>
wrote:
> If every tweet were to be issued by the same account, Claudia, you would
> need to acquire your access token through OAuth once -- then persist the
> access token in your application and use it for every authenticated API
> action -- your users wouldn't have to ever see anything having to do with
> OAuth.
>
> There's also a short cut for acquiring the access token for the account that
> "owns" the application -- you'll find a "my token" feature on your
> application details page on dev.twitter.com
>
> Taylor
>
>
>
> On Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 10:20 AM, Claudia <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I have a similar need but it is for a web app that I'm building. I
> > need to allow multiple users to update a single (my) twitter account
> > via the experience. Redirecting to the twitter authentication page
> > wouldn't make any sense to the user, and disrupts the whole
> > experience. Am I stuck here? Is there no way to use Oauth to update a
> > single account without redirecting to the twitter authentication page?
>
> > Thank you!
> > claudia
>
> > On Aug 19, 7:42 pm, Taylor Singletary <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> > > xAuth is a privilege granted on a case-by-case basis. Send a detailed
> > email
> > > to [email protected] explaining your application, its userbase, and why
> > other
> > > forms of OAuth won't work for your application.
>
> > > xAuth is limited to native desktop & native mobile applications.
>
> > > Taylor
>
> > > 2010/8/19 João Paulo Sabino de Moraes <[email protected]>
>
> > > > I'm using tweetr api (adobe air api), it uses OAuth.
> > > > Is it possible to integrate OAuth apis with xAuth ?
>
> > > > thanks

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