-\textit{Internal authentication} is for users that applied for an account by the \textit{Registration} page. There are situations when the platform must be integrated with other services or sites. For example in our university we use P2P-Tube to share videos of technical presentations, courses or social events. We also have Moodle learning platform where students already have an account, so it was desired that users can authenticate on P2P-Tube we the same account credentials from Moodle. This has been achieved thorough LDAP which permits students to authenticate on both sites with the same user name and password, without requiring them to create an additional account. Another way to make users skip signing up is by using OpenID, a standard protocol which allows them to sign in through an account from another site. However, this third party site must support OpenID. So, for example, users that already have an account on Yahoo!, Google, Twitter or WordPress can securely sign in with the same user names and passwords from that accounts. When users log in for the first time using external authentication, like LDAP or OpenID, they must complete their profile.
+\textit{Internal authentication} is for users that applied for an account by the \textit{Registration} page. There are situations when the platform must be integrated with other services or sites. For example in our university we use P2P-Tube to share videos of technical presentations, courses or social events. We also have Moodle learning platform where students already have an account, so it was desired that users can authenticate on P2P-Tube with the same account credentials from Moodle. This has been achieved thorough LDAP which permits students to authenticate on both sites with the same user name and password, without requiring them to create an additional account. Another way to make users skip signing up is by using OpenID, a standard protocol which allows them to sign in through an account from another site. However, this third party site must support OpenID. So, for example, users that already have an account on Yahoo!, Google, Twitter or WordPress can securely sign in with the same user names and passwords from that accounts. When users log in for the first time using external authentication, like LDAP or OpenID, they must complete their profile.