DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)
¿Qué es DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)An OAuth 2.0 extension (RFC 9449) that binds access tokens to a per-client key pair, so a stolen bearer token cannot be replayed by an attacker without also stealing the private signing key.
DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession at the Application Layer), specified in RFC 9449, is an OAuth 2.0 mechanism that converts bearer tokens into sender-constrained tokens without requiring mutual TLS. The client generates an ephemeral asymmetric key pair, includes the public key's JWK thumbprint as `jkt` in the access token (issued by the IdP), and on every API call sends a short-lived JWT proof signed with its private key in the `DPoP` HTTP header. The proof commits to the HTTP method, the request URI, and a fresh nonce or jti, so an attacker who steals the access token but lacks the private key cannot forge a valid proof. Resource servers verify the proof matches both the token's bound key and the current request. DPoP is one of two practical answers to OAuth bearer-token theft (the other being mTLS-bound tokens) and is now widely supported by Okta, Auth0, Entra ID, Keycloak, and several open-source libraries. Combined with PKCE and short refresh-token lifetimes, DPoP dramatically reduces the value of a stolen token to an attacker.
● Ejemplos
- 01
A mobile banking app signs a DPoP proof JWT with its TEE-stored key on every API call; a stolen access token alone gets the attacker nothing.
- 02
An IdP issues access tokens with `cnf.jkt` bound to the client's DPoP key, and the resource server rejects any request whose proof JWT doesn't match the bound thumbprint.
● Preguntas frecuentes
¿Qué es DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
An OAuth 2.0 extension (RFC 9449) that binds access tokens to a per-client key pair, so a stolen bearer token cannot be replayed by an attacker without also stealing the private signing key. Pertenece a la categoría de Identidad y acceso en ciberseguridad.
¿Qué significa DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
An OAuth 2.0 extension (RFC 9449) that binds access tokens to a per-client key pair, so a stolen bearer token cannot be replayed by an attacker without also stealing the private signing key.
¿Cómo funciona DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession at the Application Layer), specified in RFC 9449, is an OAuth 2.0 mechanism that converts bearer tokens into sender-constrained tokens without requiring mutual TLS. The client generates an ephemeral asymmetric key pair, includes the public key's JWK thumbprint as `jkt` in the access token (issued by the IdP), and on every API call sends a short-lived JWT proof signed with its private key in the `DPoP` HTTP header. The proof commits to the HTTP method, the request URI, and a fresh nonce or jti, so an attacker who steals the access token but lacks the private key cannot forge a valid proof. Resource servers verify the proof matches both the token's bound key and the current request. DPoP is one of two practical answers to OAuth bearer-token theft (the other being mTLS-bound tokens) and is now widely supported by Okta, Auth0, Entra ID, Keycloak, and several open-source libraries. Combined with PKCE and short refresh-token lifetimes, DPoP dramatically reduces the value of a stolen token to an attacker.
¿Cómo defenderse de DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
Las defensas contra DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession) combinan habitualmente controles técnicos y prácticas operativas, como se detalla en la definición.
¿Cuáles son otros nombres para DPoP (Demonstrating Proof of Possession)?
Nombres alternativos comunes: RFC 9449, Demonstrating Proof of Possession.
● Términos relacionados
- identity-access№ 839
OAuth 2.0
Marco abierto de autorización que permite al propietario de un recurso conceder a una aplicación de terceros acceso limitado y delimitado a una API, sin compartir credenciales.
- identity-access№ 642
JWT (JSON Web Token)
Formato compacto y seguro para URL (RFC 7519) que lleva claims JSON firmadas; muy usado como token de acceso, ID token y contenedor de sesion.
- identity-access№ 928
PKCE (Proof Key for Code Exchange)
An OAuth 2.0 extension (RFC 7636) that binds an authorization-code redemption to a one-time secret created by the client, neutralizing authorization-code interception attacks on public and confidential clients alike.
- identity-access№ 104
Token portador (Bearer Token)
Credencial opaca o estructurada (RFC 6750) que concede acceso a un recurso solo por su posesion, sin prueba de que el portador sea el legitimo.
- network-security№ 797
TLS mutuo (mTLS)
Extensión de TLS en la que tanto el cliente como el servidor presentan certificados X.509 para autenticarse criptográficamente entre sí.
- identity-access№ 852
OpenID Connect (OIDC)
Capa de identidad construida sobre OAuth 2.0 que permite a los clientes verificar la identidad de un usuario y obtener información de perfil mediante tokens ID firmados.