Augmenting Phantom With Auth0 Authority
Phantom already knew how to listen, see the browser, and act. The real challenge was turning that local agent into a system that could use connected accounts, delegate safely, and expose authority ...

Source: DEV Community
Phantom already knew how to listen, see the browser, and act. The real challenge was turning that local agent into a system that could use connected accounts, delegate safely, and expose authority instead of hiding it. By Younes Laaroussi Phantom started as a browser-native agent. You talk, it reacts, and the extension takes care of the visible work: reading the page, clicking, scrolling, opening tabs, and moving through the browser with almost no friction. That part was already compelling. What was missing was a trustworthy answer to a more serious question: What gives it the right to act for the user outside the tab? That question changes the architecture immediately. A browser extension can hold state, but it is the wrong place to improvise long-lived authority. As soon as Phantom started reaching into Gmail, Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Tasks, and Linear, “the extension has access” stopped sounding clever and started sounding irresponsible. The project became more interesting when I sto