[keycloak-dev] Plan for "First login with identity brokers"

Bill Burke bburke at redhat.com
Fri Oct 30 10:57:05 EDT 2015


There's an alternative problem.  Logs in with Twitter in 2005.  Logs in 
again 2015 with Google.  Is required to link with Twitter, says "screw 
it" because he doesn't remember his Twitter password and just closes his 
browser and doesn't use the website.

I've been on really popular high-traffic sites where their google login 
was broken for months (mmqb.si.com which is an NFL website for Sports 
Illustrated).  I used my Facebook identity instead.  If I had been 
required to merge accounts manually, I would have not been able to use 
the site.

On 10/29/2015 4:35 PM, Stian Thorgersen wrote:
> Linking accounts automatically is fine, but we should not have an option
> that can do that without requiring users to authenticate first.
>
> There are so many cases where a user could have one social account
> compromised. They may not care that much about the account, they may
> never use the service so they've completely forgotten about it.
>
> Imagine the following scenario:
>
> * Tom signed up for GMail in 2005 - figured it was great and continued
> using the service the rest of his life
> * Tom signed up for Twitter in 2005 - figured it was not to his taste
> and never used the account again
> * Tom now read about two factor auth and configured it on his GMail account
> * Mary (a bad person) figured that the password to Toms twitter account
> was 'password' so she's gained access to Tom's Twitter - Tom doesn't
> know, but he doesn't care either
> * Tom signs up for a website that uses Keycloak and logs in with his
> trusted GMail account
> * Now if we let Mary login to the website that uses Keycloak with Toms
> old Twitter account, without first proving she's Tom (which she can't),
> would be just plain daft!
>
> On 29 October 2015 at 06:37, Bill Burke <bburke at redhat.com
> <mailto:bburke at redhat.com>> wrote:
>
>
>
>     On 10/29/2015 5:42 AM, Vlastimil Elias wrote:
>     >
>     >
>     > On 28.10.2015 21:32, Bill Burke wrote:
>     >> If a user has loads of social networks and links a bunch of them, if
>     >> *any one* of them is compromised the entire account is compromised.
>     >> Most sites using social login, the only reason is there is a login is
>     >> for the appliation to collect marketing data.  So, the default behavior
>     >> should make things as simple as possible for the user.
>     >>
>     >> At a minimum, by default, the user should not be required to link an
>     >> account if there is a conflicting duplicate email given by the provider.
>     >>    I have founddeveloeprs.redhat.com <http://develoeprs.redhat.com> very difficult
>     to use.
>     >
>     > yep, it is difficult to use because it have to follow company's policy
>     > with unique emails and Keycloak do not provide necessary support for
>     > simple and user friendly account linking currently ;-)
>     >
>
>     Yeah, its not your fault.  Its ours.
>
>
>     --
>     Bill Burke
>     JBoss, a division of Red Hat
>     http://bill.burkecentral.com
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>     keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>
>     https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
>
>

-- 
Bill Burke
JBoss, a division of Red Hat
http://bill.burkecentral.com


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