+
+> If you're at a kiosk, you'll need to log out of your openid provider too.
+> Or use a provider that doesn't use cookies to keep you logged in. (Or
+> don't check the box that makes your provider set a cookie when you log in.)
+>
+> AFAIK openid doesn't have single signoff capabilities yet. --[[Joey]]
+
+I'm having a problem using my preferred openid. I have
+http://thewordnerd.info configured as a delegate to
+thewordnerd.myopenid.com. It works fine on Lighthouse, Slicehost and
+everywhere else I've used it. Here, though, if I use the delegate I'm sent
+to my openid identity URL on myopenid.com. If I use the identity URL
+directly, I get the verification page.
+
+Is my delegation broken in some way that works for all these other apps but
+which fails here? Or is something broken in Ikiwiki's implementation?
+
+> I guess this is the same issue filed by you at
+> [[bugs/OpenID_delegation_fails_on_my_server]] --[[Joey]]
+
+Yes. I'd only recently set up my server as a delegate under wordpress, so still thought that perhaps the issue was on my end. But I'd since used my delegate successfully elsewhere, so I filed it as a bug against ikiwiki.
+
+----
+###Pretty Painless
+I just tried logging it with OpenID and it Just Worked. Pretty painless. If you want to turn off password authentication on ikiwiki.info, I say go for it. --[[blipvert]]
+
+> I doubt I will. The new login interface basically makes password login
+> and openid cooexist nicely. --[[Joey]]
+
+###LiveJournal openid
+One caveat to the above is that, of course, OpenID is a distributed trust system which means you do have to think about the trust aspect. A case in point is livejournal.com whose OpenID implementation is badly broken in one important respect: If a LiveJournal user deletes his or her journal, and a different user registers a journal with the same name (this is actually quite a common occurrence on LiveJournal), they in effect inherit the previous journal owner's identity. LiveJournal does not even have a mechanism in place for a remote site even to detect that a journal has changed hands. It is an extremely dodgy situation which they seem to have *no* intention of fixing, and the bottom line is that the "identity" represented by a *username*.livejournal.com token should not be trusted as to its long-term uniqueness. Just FYI. --[[blipvert]]
+
+----
+
+Submitting bugs in the OpenID components will be difficult if OpenID must be working first...