At the moment we are building a web shop as a SPA
application. All the SKU information is provided by a Web Api 2
service.
Of course the web shop is publicly available to every visitor, and currently there is only one user who can log in to manage the web shop: the administrator.
For the administrator we built in the basic authentication with the bearer
token, as a lot of samples on the internet shows us, but now we need every user to log in before they can see any product. Not really what we have in mind for a web shop ;-)
What we would like to implement is that our Web Api is not available to the world but only for our SPA application. Every blog post or tutorial on authorization seems to assume that there is always a user that needs to log in, in our case there is only one user: the administrator.
The AllowAnonymous
attribute makes specific API calls available to the world again, so that's also a dead end.
Basically it comes down to preventing any other apps (web or mobile) to fetch the data from our Web Api.
What would be the best and most secure approach to secure our Web Api without having the anonymous visitors of our web shop to log in?
Solution for now: Altough I'm not 100% happy with this solution, it will work for now. We implemented the OAuth Implicit flow with CORS enabled for specific domain.