It’s already been a year since IndieAuth was published as a W3C Note! A lot has happened in that time! There’s been several new plugins and services launch support for IndieAuth, and it’s even made appearances at several events around the world!
Micro.blog added native support for IndieAuth, so your hosted micro.blog account is now also an IndieAuth provider
Dobrado launched native support for IndieAuth
The IndieAuth Plugin for Drupal launched in the beginning of the year, and has had several releases since then
The IndieAuth Plugin for Grav adds support to your Grav site by delegating to indieauth.com
The IndieAuth Plugin for WordPress had a major rewrite and supports IndieAuth natively now
I presented IndieAuth at the W3C Workshop on Strong Authentication & Identity in December, and even published a video of the talk afterwards!
At API Days Global, oauth.io presented a session including IndieAuth.
Josh Hawxwell gave a talk at NottsJS called Indie What? where he covered several IndieWeb building blocks including IndieAuth.
In July, I wrote a blog post called OAuth for the Open Web, where I detailed the technical solutions IndieAuth provides on top of OAuth to enable it to work in a more open and less corporate environment.
In October, I published Dweb: Identity for the Decentralized Web with IndieAuth on the Mozilla Hacks Blog.
So here’s to a productive year for IndieAuth in 2018! Looking forward to seeing what new developments come up in 2019!