Facebook: querying public events without requiring users to be logged in? - javascript

So I am confused on the new FB requirements for querying public events(for instance getting the start time), and it seems I am not the only one, even Facebook's own examples no longer work.....
Anyway, I would like to be able to query some public events and display the information on my site without requiring the user to be logged into facebook(since the information is public, that should be possible, since if I go directly to the Facebook page while logged out of Facebook, I can see all the information I want to query), but this doesn't seem possible to do(safely) on the client side anymore.
In order to use the graph API to query events an access token, either user, app, or page manager, is required. But if the user is not logged in then obviously I cannot use their access token, and publishing my app or page manager access tokens is a recipe for disaster, so how can I query public event data on the client-side without requiring the user to log in?

From the Facebook Event API page:
Starting July 5th, an access token will be required to access even
public events. To read an Event, you will need one of the following:
a user access token for a user who can see the event an app access
token (for non-public events, must be the app that created the event)
a page access token (for non-public events, must be the page that
created the event)
Bummer, it looks like this policy was just revised a week or two ago. :-/

Related

OneDrive API Share document for offline writing/updating

I have created a web app which is making use of OneDrive API (https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/onedrive/developer/rest-api/) to perform actions such as create/update/rename/delete of documents etc. I am authorizing requests with OAuth 2.0 (client side - that means every access token is valid for ~1h and then silently I am getting a new token) and then perform previous actions using that token.
I have a new requirement for the authorized user to share his/her documents for writing/updating them (I found out that API has option for inserting permissions (https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/onedrive/developer/rest-api/api/driveitem_invite).
Is it possible for a non-authenticated user to be able to write/update documents (programmatically - via OneDrive API or some other API?) that have been created from the authenticated user that shared these? (something that is similar to Microsoft Word online when a user is sharing his document and offline/ guest users are able to edit it?
Thanks.
Some Update:
First of all documentation for REST API/ endpoints is chaotic. (https://github.com/OneDrive/onedrive-api-docs/issues/839)
I found out that I can get shared document via these endpoints:
GET: https://api.onedrive.com/v1.0/shares/encodedUrl/driveItem
And update shared document only if I have an access token
PUT: https://api.onedrive.com/v1.0/shares/encodedUrl/driveItem/content?access_token=accessToken
where encodedUrl can be obtained as : https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/graph/docs/api-reference/v1.0/api/shares_get
(check example on C# with sharing url )
So, I am still wondering how possible is to update a document without any authentication but just a share url.

How can my website retrieve my Facebook page Live Videos?

If I go to the Graph API Explorer, get a User Access Token, and then go to /<page-id>/live_videos I can return a list of live videos from that page, including the status (VOD aka past, or LIVE) and the embed_html.
This is great but the problem is this User Access Token will expire. I want to be able to get this data as part of my website to show visitors whether we are live or not, and if so give them an option to open the video right there on the site. It shouldn't be something a user has to login in to allow my app to access FB on their behalf.
So I tried using an App Access Token which I got by using the App ID and App Secret of my page's 'Facebook App' as described in the Facebook docs here... but the Token that I get from this does not work; it tells me A user access token is required to request this resource.
Why must I get a User Access Token when it's my App (aka my website) that wants the data?
Honestly I didn't think it would be hard to get this information since it is a completely public page; I would have guessed you don't even need to authenticate, but probably just some need sort of identifying token for your app for rate limiting, etc. Is there any method like that?

Facebook Authentication as App

To begin, I'm using the Facebook Javascript SDK within a JSP.
I'm developing a custom Facepile component. The idea is that I want to pull back a list of people attending a public Facebook event (public in that the creator of the event has set it to be "public"). I then want to be able to toggle between showing "everyone" that is going to the event and showing "friends" (as in Facebook friends) who are going to the event. I understand that the latter requires the "friends_events" permission as part of my access token.
Currently, I am able to do all of this just fine. I'm comfortable working within Graph and with using FQL. What I'm struggling with is that, in the case I'm just going to show "everyone" attending the event, I don't want to require the user to log into Facebook. In looking through the documentation, I see that to get a list of all attendees for a public event, I will still need an access token. However, I can't seem to find any good documentation about how to use this access token to forgo user authentication with Facebook.
So, in short, what I'm looking for is:
1) Is there any way I can get the list of attendees to a public Facebook event without having to get the user to log in?
2) If so, could you provide an example of how to do this? Right now I'm able to get an access token using my app for authentication but, now that I've got the token, I'm unsure how to actually use it (i.e. it doesn't look like either FB.init or FB.api takes an access token as a parameter).
Thanks much and please let me know if I can clarify anything further!

Can I get public graph API data without a token?

I'd like to display a list of public Facebook events that I post on a separate webpage so it's easier to keep updated - just update Facebook and the next call to the graph API shows my current events.
I've got the javascript SDK working on the page, but the graph API seems to always want an access token for me to request any data, even public stuff. I obviously don't want a user to have to log in to my web page just to see some events. Is there a way to request public event data without an access token? Or can I add a hardcoded access token that is only available for use by my Facebook app?
I just checked and, no, you can't access public events without a token.
But yes, you can have an access token just to retrieve this (for instance, if you already have an app, you can use your user token for it).
My suggestion is that you access the graph api only once after you add/update your events, and store the result in a static place (json, db, static file, etc) so that you can easily show it when needed instead of making requests to the graph api every time.

SINGLE SIGN ON SECURITY THREAT! FACEBOOK access_token broadcast in the open/clear

02/20/2011:
It was confirmed by Facebook today that indeed there is one call in which the access_token is broadcast in the open . . . it just happens to be one call I use to make sure that the USER is still logged in before saving to my application database. Their recommendation was to use the SSL option provided as of last month for canvase and facebook as a whole. For the most part the Auth and Auth are secure.
Findings:
Subsequent to my posting there was a remark made that this was not really a question but I thought I did indeed postulate one. So that there is no ambiquity here is the question with a lead in:
Since there is no data sent from Facebook during the Canvas Load process that is not at some point divulged, including the access_token, session and other data that could uniquely identify a user, does any one see any other way other than adding one more layer, i.e., a password, sent over the wire via HTTPS along with the access_toekn, that will insure unique untampered with security by the user?
Using Wireshark I captured the local broadcast while loading my Canvas Application page. I was hugely surprised to see the access_token broadcast in the open, viewable for any one to see. This access_token is appended to any https call to the Facebook OpenGraph API.
Using facebook as a single click log on has now raised huge concerns for me. It is stored in a session object in memory and the cookie is cleared upon app termination and after reviewing the FB.Init calls I saw a lot of HTTPS calls so I assumed the access_token was always encrypted.
But last night I saw in the status bar a call from what was simply an http call that included the App ID so I felt I should sniff the Application Canvas load sequence.
Today I did sniff the broadcast and in the attached image you can see that there are http calls with the access_token being broadcast in the open and clear for anyone to gain access to.
Am I missing something, is what I am seeing and my interpretation really correct. If any one can sniff and get the access_token they can theorically make calls to the Graph API via https, even though the call back would still need to be the site established in Facebook's application set up.
But what is truly a security threat is anyone using the access_token for access to their own site. I do not see the value of a single sign on via Facebook if the only thing that was established as secure was the access_token - becuase for what I can see it clearly is not secure. Access tokens that never have an expire date do not change. Access_tokens are different for every user, to access to another site could be held tight to just a single user, but compromising even a single user's data is unacceptable.
http://www.creatingstory.com/images/InTheOpen.png
Went back and did more research on this:
FINDINGS:
Went back an re ran the canvas application to verify that it was not any of my code that was not broadcasting.
In this call: HTTP GET /connect.php/en_US/js/CacheData HTTP/1.1
The USER ID is clearly visible in the cookie. So USER_ID's are fully visible, but they are already. Anyone can go to pretty much any ones page and hover over the image and see the USER ID. So no big threat. APP_ID are also easily obtainable - but . . .
http://www.creatingstory.com/images/InTheOpen2.png
The above file clearly shows the FULL ACCESS TOKEN clearly in the OPEN via a Facebook initiated call.
Am I wrong. TELL ME I AM WRONG because I want to be wrong about this.
I have since reset my app secret so I am showing the real sniff of the Canvas Page being loaded.
Additional data 02/20/2011:
#ifaour - I appreciate the time you took to compile your response.
I am pretty familiar with the OAuth process and have a pretty solid understanding of the signed_request unpacking and utilization of the access_token. I perform a substantial amount of my processing on the server and my Facebook server side flows are all complete and function without any flaw that I know of. The application secret is secure and never passed to the front end application and is also changed regularly. I am being as fanatical about security as I can be, knowing there is so much I don’t know that could come back and bite me.
Two huge access_token issues:
The issues concern the possible utilization of the access_token from the USER AGENT (browser). During the FB.INIT() process of the Facebook JavaScript SDK, a cookie is created as well as an object in memory called a session object. This object, along with the cookie contain the access_token, session, a secret, and uid and status of the connection. The session object is structured such that is supports both the new OAuth and the legacy flows. With OAuth, the access_token and status are pretty much al that is used in the session object.
The first issue is that the access_token is used to make HTTPS calls to the GRAPH API. If you had the access_token, you could do this from any browser:
https://graph.facebook.com/220439?access_token=...
and it will return a ton of information about the user. So any one with the access token can gain access to a Facebook account. You can also make additional calls to any info the user has granted access to the application tied to the access_token. At first I thought that a call into the GRAPH had to have a Callback to the URL established in the App Setup, but I tested it as mentioned below and it will return info back right into the browser. Adding that callback feature would be a good idea I think, tightens things up a bit.
The second issue is utilization of some unique private secured data that identifies the user to the third party data base, i.e., like in my case, I would use a single sign on to populate user information into my database using this unique secured data item (i.e., access_token which contains the APP ID, the USER ID, and a hashed with secret sequence). None of this is a problem on the server side. You get a signed_request, you unpack it with secret, make HTTPS calls, get HTTPS responses back. When a user has information entered via the USER AGENT(browser) that must be stored via a POST, this unique secured data element would be sent via HTTPS such that they are validated prior to data base insertion.
However, If there is NO secured piece of unique data that is supplied via the single sign on process, then there is no way to guarantee unauthorized access. The access_token is the one piece of data that is utilized by Facebook to make the HTTPS calls into the GRAPH API. it is considered unique in regards to BOTH the USER and the APPLICATION and is initially secure via the signed_request packaging. If however, it is subsequently transmitted in the clear and if I can sniff the wire and obtain the access_token, then I can pretend to be the application and gain the information they have authorized the application to see. I tried the above example from a Safari and IE browser and it returned all of my information to me in the browser.
In conclusion, the access_token is part of the signed_request and that is how the application initially obtains it. After OAuth authentication and authorization, i.e., the USER has logged into Facebook and then runs your app, the access_token is stored as mentioned above and I have sniffed it such that I see it stored in a Cookie that is transmitted over the wire, resulting in there being NO UNIQUE SECURED IDENTIFIABLE piece of information that can be used to support interaction with the database, or in other words, unless there were one more piece of secure data sent along with the access_token to my database, i.e., a password, I would not be able to discern if it is a legitimate call. Luckily I utilized secure AJAX via POST and the call has to come from the same domain, but I am sure there is a way to hijack that.
I am totally open to any ideas on this topic on how to uniquely identify my USERS other than adding another layer (password) via this single sign on process or if someone would just share with me that I read and analyzed my data incorrectly and that the access_token is always secure over the wire.
Mahalo nui loa in advance.
I am not terribly familiar with Facebook's authentication/authorization methods, but I do believe that they implement oauth (or something close to it) for delegation, distributed authorization, and "single sign-on".
OAuth is described by RFC-5849
EDIT: Facebook Uses OAuth 2.0 which is still in working draft.
In OAuth, and similar systems, the "access_token" is only part of the picture. There is also typically a secret key, which is known only by the service provider (facebook) and the client application (your app). The secret key is the only part that is expected to stay secret - and that part is never sent over the wire (after it's initial issuance).
In the case of Facebook, I think the secret key is assigned to you when you register your application to use their API, and the 'access_token' is returned to you for a given user, whenever the user agrees to allow your app to access their info.
Messages are sent in the clear, including the user's username, and the relevant "access_token"; However, each message must also include a valid signature in order to be accepted by the server. The signature is a cryptographically computed string, that is created using a technique called HMAC.
Computing the HMAC signature requires both the token and the secret, and includes other key parts of the message as well. Each signature is unique for the given message contents; and each message uses a nonce to ensure that no two messages can ever be exactly identical.
When the server receives a signed message, it starts by extracting the access_token (clear-text), and determining which app the token was issued for. It then retrieves the matching secret from its own local database (the secret is not contained in the message). Finally, the server uses the clear-text message, the clear-text access_token, and the secret to compute the expected HMAC signature for the message. If the computed signature matches the signature on the received message, then the message must have been sent by someone who knows the same secret (i.e. your application).
Have a look at Section 3.1 of RFC-5849 for an OAuth specific example, and further elaboration on the details.
Incidentally, the same approach is used by Amazon to control access to S3 and EC2, as well as most other service providers that offer API access with long-term authorization. Suffice it to say - this approach is secure. It might be a little counter-intuitive at first, but it makes sense once you think it through.
Adding a few links and quotes from Facebook Documentation:
Facebook is indeed using the HMAC-SHA256 algorithm. Registration document (PHP Example reading signed_request section).
Always verify the signed_request:
If you are unable to validate the
signed_request because you can't embed
your application secret (e.g. in
javascript or a desktop application)
then you MUST only use one piece of
information from the payload, the
oauth_token.
The Authentication Document contains a lot of useful info about the different flows you may use to authenticate a user. Also read the Security Considerations section at the bottom of the page:
Cross site request forgery is an
attack in which an trusted
(authenticated and authorized) user
unknowingly performs an action on
website. To prevent this attack, you
should pass an identifier in the state
parameter, and then validate the state
parameter matches on the response. We
strongly recommend that any app
implementing Facebook user login
implement CSRF protection using this
mechanism.
It was confirmed by Facebook that indeed there is one call in which the access_token is broadcast in the open - it just happens to be one call I use to make sure that the user is still logged in before saving to my application database. Their recommendation was to use the SSL option provided as of last month for canvas and Facebook as a whole. For the most part the Auth and Auth are secure.
To ensure a secure interface between a third party application and a Facebook application or even any website that uses Facebook Single Sign on, an identity question would provide the extra layer when used in conjunction with the access_token.
Either that or require your users to use Facebook with the new SSL feature of Facebook and Facebook Canvas Applications. If the access_token is broadcast in the open it cannot be used to uniquely identify anyone in your third party database when needing to have a confirmed identity before database interactions.

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