# Start TikTok OAuth connect flow Initiates the TikTok OAuth connect flow for an authenticated user. Returns an authorization URL that the client should redirect the user to. The user will authorize the app on TikTok and be redirected back to the callback endpoint. Requests the following TikTok scopes: user.info.basic, video.list Endpoint: POST /oauth/tiktok/start Version: 0.1.0 Security: bearerAuth ## Request fields (application/json): - `redirectUri` (string, required) Full URL where the user should be redirected after OAuth completion Example: "https://app.varmply.com/integrations/callback" ## Response 200 fields (application/json): - `authorization_url` (string, required) URL to redirect the user to for TikTok authorization Example: "https://www.tiktok.com/v2/auth/authorize/?client_key=xxx&redirect_uri=xxx&scope=user.info.basic,video.list&response_type=code&state=xxx" - `expires_at_timestamp` (string, required) ISO timestamp when the authorization URL expires Example: "2024-01-01T00:10:00Z" ## Response 400 fields (application/json): - `error` (string, required) Error code that identifies the type of error. This is a stable identifier that can be used for programmatic error handling. Common codes include: - NOT_FOUND - Resource not found - VALIDATION_ERROR - Input validation failed - PERMISSION_DENIED - User lacks permission for the action - CONFLICT - Request conflicts with current resource state - UNAUTHORIZED - Authentication required - INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR - Unexpected server error Example: "VALIDATION_ERROR" - `message` (string, required) User-friendly error message that should always be displayed to end users. This message is designed to be clear, actionable, and free of technical details. This field is always present and contains the primary message for end users. Example: "The email address you entered is not valid. Please check the format and try again." - `technicalMessage` (string) Optional technical message for developers. Contains detailed information including IDs, error codes, and technical context. Only included when it differs from the user-friendly message field. When present, developers can use this for debugging while end users should see the message field. Example: "Campaign with ID campaign_123 not found" - `details` (object) Additional error details (optional). May contain structured information about the error, such as validation field errors or additional context. - `requestId` (string) Unique request identifier for tracing. Included in X-Request-ID header and can be used to correlate errors with server logs. Example: "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000" - `timestamp` (string, required) ISO 8601 timestamp when the error occurred Example: "2024-01-01T00:00:00Z" ## Response 401 fields (application/json): - `error` (string, required) Error code that identifies the type of error. This is a stable identifier that can be used for programmatic error handling. Common codes include: - NOT_FOUND - Resource not found - VALIDATION_ERROR - Input validation failed - PERMISSION_DENIED - User lacks permission for the action - CONFLICT - Request conflicts with current resource state - UNAUTHORIZED - Authentication required - INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR - Unexpected server error Example: "VALIDATION_ERROR" - `message` (string, required) User-friendly error message that should always be displayed to end users. This message is designed to be clear, actionable, and free of technical details. This field is always present and contains the primary message for end users. Example: "The email address you entered is not valid. Please check the format and try again." - `technicalMessage` (string) Optional technical message for developers. Contains detailed information including IDs, error codes, and technical context. Only included when it differs from the user-friendly message field. When present, developers can use this for debugging while end users should see the message field. Example: "Campaign with ID campaign_123 not found" - `details` (object) Additional error details (optional). May contain structured information about the error, such as validation field errors or additional context. - `requestId` (string) Unique request identifier for tracing. Included in X-Request-ID header and can be used to correlate errors with server logs. Example: "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000" - `timestamp` (string, required) ISO 8601 timestamp when the error occurred Example: "2024-01-01T00:00:00Z" ## Response 503 fields (application/json): - `error` (string, required) Error code that identifies the type of error. This is a stable identifier that can be used for programmatic error handling. Common codes include: - NOT_FOUND - Resource not found - VALIDATION_ERROR - Input validation failed - PERMISSION_DENIED - User lacks permission for the action - CONFLICT - Request conflicts with current resource state - UNAUTHORIZED - Authentication required - INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR - Unexpected server error Example: "VALIDATION_ERROR" - `message` (string, required) User-friendly error message that should always be displayed to end users. This message is designed to be clear, actionable, and free of technical details. This field is always present and contains the primary message for end users. Example: "The email address you entered is not valid. Please check the format and try again." - `technicalMessage` (string) Optional technical message for developers. Contains detailed information including IDs, error codes, and technical context. Only included when it differs from the user-friendly message field. When present, developers can use this for debugging while end users should see the message field. Example: "Campaign with ID campaign_123 not found" - `details` (object) Additional error details (optional). May contain structured information about the error, such as validation field errors or additional context. - `requestId` (string) Unique request identifier for tracing. Included in X-Request-ID header and can be used to correlate errors with server logs. Example: "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000" - `timestamp` (string, required) ISO 8601 timestamp when the error occurred Example: "2024-01-01T00:00:00Z"