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It's a good idea to have a well-known URI for this, even though as I understand it, the typical use cases for well-known are cases when it's impossible to use embedded links for identifying a URI.
In this case, at least there's also the case for making the change-password-url discoverable from a resource (such as the home page of a user). I am wondering whether it wouldn't be useful to have a link relation type as well?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
This is somewhat addressed in the FAQ in the README.
The main concern is that using a <link> would not be useful to many of the applications implementing the client-side of this spec. Most of those being native password manager applications, they will want to refrain from parsing HTML in most cases. Doing a simple GET to a well-known URI and parsing the response headers is more within reach, and should therefore lead to a higher rate of adoption.
The main concern is that using a |<link>| would not be useful to many of
the applications implementing the client-side of this spec. Most of
those being native password manager applications, they will want to
refrain from parsing HTML in most cases. Doing a simple GET to a
well-known URI and parsing the response headers is more within reach,
and should therefore lead to a higher rate of adoption.
there's no need to parse HTML, it would be possible to add the link in
the HTTP Link header field. the spec could make such a recommendation.
It's a good idea to have a well-known URI for this, even though as I understand it, the typical use cases for well-known are cases when it's impossible to use embedded links for identifying a URI.
In this case, at least there's also the case for making the change-password-url discoverable from a resource (such as the home page of a user). I am wondering whether it wouldn't be useful to have a link relation type as well?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: