Re: [OAUTH-WG] Issuers, Discovery Docs & Brands

Vladimir Dzhuvinov <vladimir@connect2id.com> Tue, 26 May 2020 06:03 UTC

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From: Vladimir Dzhuvinov <vladimir@connect2id.com>
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Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] Issuers, Discovery Docs & Brands
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My understanding of the branding concept was to present different UIs to
resource owners during login and authorization, while keeping the OP /
AS the same, meaning identical issuer. In a spec it would be helpful to
spell out what branding means (and what not).

Regarding a token being issued for "personal" vs "business" and
confusion - the usage of the token is normally defined by its scope and
audience (RS) and if this rule is observed (and it's not relied solely
on the issuer URI for that) then clients shouldn't get confused here.

Vladimir

On 23/05/2020 06:26, Francis Pouatcha wrote:
> - I will go for Option 1 even if we have the same runtime instance
> producing tokens under different issuer uris.
> - Option 2 might expose security risk as many clients rely on
> the issuer to associate the  token with authorization context. By no
> way shall a token issued for "personal" be valid for "business".
> Therefore considering the use of the same issuer here might lead to
> confusion at the RP.
> - In order to avoid confusion, AS must make sure each "brand"
> uses separated key material to produce the token.
>
> BTW:
> The term brand as used in the context of most Open Banking initiatives
> refers to entities consuming the Interface provided by TPPs (Third
> Party Providers).. TPPs play the roles of RPs in the oAuth2 context.
>
> Unless I misunderstood this thread we are using a brand here to refer
> to an AS virtual host (issuer-uri).
>
> Going forward, we need to agree on choosing another term to refer to
> issuers, and leave the term "Brand" for consumers of TPP-interfaces.
>
> The core brand problem we will be facing in open banking is for having
> the AS display the "consumer-brand" logo to the RO in the consent screen.
>
>
>     >> On 22 May 2020, at 08:52, Vladimir Dzhuvinov
>     <vladimir@connect2id.com <mailto:vladimir@connect2id.com>> wrote:
>     >>
>     >> With that said it makes sense to devise a structure which can
>     accommodate UI driven as well as automatic choice.
>     >>
>     >>      ? The UI driven chooser will need a human readable
>     description and other UI hints. This can work for instance with
>     "classic" OIDC Discovery.
>     >>
>     >>      ? The "auto" chooser will need some sort of an ID. For a
>     bank chooser this means providing the issuer URI and an optional
>     brand ID and both must get registered together. Or, one could
>     define a standard brand ID (label) for banking operations and if
>     the "alternative_authorization_endpoints" is present look for it
>     in the structure, else fall back to the default
>     "authorization_endpoint".
>     >> Here is one possible layout which has IDs and UI hints:
>     >>
>     >> {
>     >>   ...
>     >>   "alternative_authorization_endpoints": {
>     >>     "banking": {
>     >>       "authorization_endpoint":
>     >> "https://loadsamoney/business/auth"
>     >> ,
>     >>       "description": "loadsmoney business banking customers",
>     >>       "logo_url":
>     >> "https://loadsamoney/business/logo.png"
>     >>
>     >>     },
>     >>     "personal": {
>     >>       "authorization_endpoint":
>     >> "https://loadsamoney/consumer/auth"
>     >> ,
>     >>       "description": "loadsmoney personal customers",
>     >>       "logo_url":
>     >> "https://loadsamoney/consumer/logo.png"
>     >>
>     >>     }
>     >>   }
>     >> }
>     >>
>     >>
>     >>
>     >> On 22/05/2020 09:59, Torsten Lodderstedt wrote:
>     >>> I think an id or label per endpoint set would be needed to
>     determine the set of endpoints to be used by a certain client.
>     >>>
>     >>> On the conceptual side, I?m asking myself how the complete
>     process is supposed to work. Who is deciding what issuer/endpoint
>     set combination to use. I assume in an open banking scenario,
>     there will always be some kind of bank chooser. Will this chooser
>     provide the client with issuer and brand id?
>     >>>
>     >>>
>     >>>> On 22. May 2020, at 08:10, Vladimir Dzhuvinov
>     <vladimir@connect2id.com <mailto:vladimir@connect2id.com>>
>     >>>>  wrote:
>     >>>>
>     >>>> A mapping like the one you propose can definitely work. Since
>     the user will be making the choice which endpoint to take with the
>     client app, having the logo_uri is a good idea. If the branded
>     endpoints differ somehow in policy one could also allow inclusion
>     of the op_policy_uri and op_tos_uri params from Discovery.
>     >>>>
>     >>>>
>     >>>>
>     https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-discovery-1_0.html#IssuerDiscovery
>     >>>>
>     >>>>
>     >>>> Vladimir
>     >>>>
>     >>>> On 20/05/2020 19:16, Joseph Heenan wrote:
>     >>>>
>     >>>>> Thanks for your thoughts Vladimir!
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> The client_id based solution I wasn?t previously aware of -
>     unfortunately it doesn?t solve the problem for app2app, as the
>     mobile OS selects the app to use based purely on the URL (and in
>     at least the iOS case will not offer the user a choice if multiple
>     apps claim to handle the same url).
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> I think some kind of mapping like you suggest will work and
>     fallback, I wonder about a structure in the authorization server
>     metadata something like this:
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> {
>     >>>>>   ...
>     >>>>>   "alternative_authorization_endpoints": [
>     >>>>>     {
>     >>>>>       "authorization_endpoint":
>     >>>>> "https://loadsamoney/business/auth"
>     >>>>> ,
>     >>>>>       "description": "loadsmoney business banking customers",
>     >>>>>       "logo_url":
>     >>>>> "https://loadsamoney/business/logo.png"
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>     },
>     >>>>>     {
>     >>>>>       "authorization_endpoint":
>     >>>>> "https://loadsamoney/consumer/auth"
>     >>>>> ,
>     >>>>>       "description": "loadsmoney personal customers",
>     >>>>>       "logo_url":
>     >>>>> "https://loadsamoney/consumer/logo.png"
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>     }
>     >>>>>   ]
>     >>>>> }
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> And as you say, the existing authorization_endpoint can be a
>     fallback for clients that are unaware of the new spec or prefer
>     the simpler option of just using a single authorization endpoint.
>     Supporting the new spec would allow a better UX though so there?s
>     advantages to client to do so.
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>> Speaking of mTLS, I'm not sure how the
>     "mtls_endpoint_aliases" can be sensibly combined with the proposed
>     multi-brand spec.
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>> I think that particular part is not really an issue as mtls
>     isn?t used at the authorization endpoint.
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> Thanks
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>> Joseph
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>
>     >>>>>> On 20 May 2020, at 16:07, Vladimir Dzhuvinov
>     <vladimir@connect2id.com <mailto:vladimir@connect2id.com>>
>     >>>>>>  wrote:
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> Hi Dave,
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> In the absence of such a "multi-brand" spec we have tackled
>     this issue in the past by letting the "brand" be encoded in the
>     client_id. An alternative scenario is to do a "brand" lookup by
>     client_id. Then let the AS render the "branded" authZ endpoint.
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> You're probably aware the mTLS spec is allowing for
>     endpoint aliases, so this is not the first time such as need has
>     occurred:
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8705#section-5
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> One could devise a similar JSON object with mappings
>     "label" - "authorization_endpoint".
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> Clients that are aware of the new spec will look it up,
>     those that are not will fall back to the std "authorization_endpoint".
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> Speaking of mTLS, I'm not sure how the
>     "mtls_endpoint_aliases" can be sensibly combined with the proposed
>     multi-brand spec.
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> Vladimir
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>> On 20/05/2020 15:07, Dave Tonge wrote:
>     >>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> Dear OAuth WG
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> We have an issue in the OpenID FAPI Working Group that we
>     believe affects the wider OAuth community.
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> In summary: what is the recommended approach to discovery
>     (RFC8414) for Authorization Servers who support multiple "brands" .
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> If brands are completely separate, then it seems sensible
>     that each brand must have its own `issuer` and therefore its own
>     discovery document at the correct location (i.e. brand 1 would
>     have an issuer of
>     >>>>>>> "https://as/brand1" and a discovery document available at 
>     https://as/.well-known/oauth-authorization-server/brand1
>     >>>>>>> ).
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> However in the real world it is not always so simple. We
>     have many existing implementations in UK open banking that support
>     multiple authorization endpoints. Here is an example (thanks to
>     @Joseph Heenan )
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>> Bank ?loadsamoney? has one idp and, for internet banking,
>     one ?login page? for both business and personal customers.
>     >>>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>> They have separate mobile apps for business/personal, and
>     are required to support app2app. This means they will definitely
>     be exposing multiple authorization endpoints (as there?s a 1:1
>     mapping of authorization endpoints to mobile apps) - the choice is
>     how they do this.
>     >>>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>> Their choices are:
>     >>>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>> 1. Multiple discovery endpoints (one for business, one
>     for personal), each with a different authorization endpoint,
>     multiple issuers (if their vendor allows this)
>     >>>>>>>> 2. Single discovery endpoint, single issuer, multiple
>     authorization endpoints listed in one discovery doc (one for
>     business, one for personal) some of which are hardcoded by the 3rd
>     party
>     >>>>>>>> 3. Multiple discovery endpoints each with a different
>     authorization endpoint, same issuer in all cases (breaks RFC8414
>     and OIDC Discovery)
>     >>>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> Option 3 is invalid and that leaves us with options 1 and 2.
>     >>>>>>> Option 1 can be problematic as often it is in reality the
>     same `issuer` behind the scenes.
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> We would like to get feedback on this issue and
>     potentially an extension to RFC8414 to allow the definition of
>     multiple authorization endpoints.
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> Thanks in advance
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>> Dave Tonge
>     >>>>>>> Co-Chair FAPI WG
>     >>>>>>> Open ID Foundation
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>>>>>
>     >>>> --
>     >>>> Vladimir Dzhuvinov
>
> -- 
> Francis Pouatcha
> Co-Founder and Technical Lead at adorys
> https://adorsys-platform.de/solutions/
>
> _______________________________________________
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-- 
Vladimir Dzhuvinov