MOODLE 1.9 Extension Development by Churchward & Moore last April 2010




Modular Object-Oriented Dynamic Learning Environment or also known as MOODLE is a Course Management System/ Learning Management System. It is an open source   E-learning Software. It is used by many schools, universities and colleges to help them manage exams, grading, and many more utilities, which can be helpful to the said establishments.

MOODLE has features that allow it to scale very large deployments and hundreds and thousands of students, yet it can also be used for primary schools or to an education hobbyist.  The users can use the activity modules (such as forums, databases and wikis) to build richly collaborative communities of learning around their subject matter.

To get MOODLE it comes in variety of packages that can be installed .Some webhosts offer MOODLE as part of their hosting packages, although it varies in reliability. Other webhosts offer MOODLE for free, but this usually comes with conditions attached, like having advertisements on user’s site.

            Oauth is a security protocol that enables the users to grant third-party access without revealing the true identity of the user.  Oauth started last November 2006. After a long month of discussion, the final draft of Oauth Core 1.0 was released on October 3, 2007.

          
            What is Oauth for? As what Mr. Hammer-Lahav cite in his example, Oauth provides a special key that allows a third-party user access personal data without revealing the identity of the user. The user will just have to authenticate the application so user can grant limited access to its personal and secret data but the regular key which is only the user knows will be used to unlock everything.

            Most of the websites today are upgrading. They offer different services that ties together functionality from other sites. This is a very good service but what is not good is that these third-party websites requires the username and password of the user. By this, the secret credentials of the user will be revealed and they will be given a full access on manipulating the personal account.

            In using Oauth, the user will no longer have to provide passwords to grant access on users private resources when using a third-party application. “While OpenID is all about using a single identity to sign into many sites, Oauth is about giving access to your stuff without sharing your identity at all.” (Hammar-Lahav, 2012)



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