<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><oembed><type>video</type><version>1.0</version><html>&lt;iframe src=&quot;https://www.loom.com/embed/24312497653d43adadefa11bb4f8ebce&quot; frameborder=&quot;0&quot; width=&quot;1920&quot; height=&quot;1440&quot; webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;</html><height>1440</height><width>1920</width><provider_name>Loom</provider_name><provider_url>https://www.loom.com</provider_url><thumbnail_height>1440</thumbnail_height><thumbnail_width>1920</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_url>https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/24312497653d43adadefa11bb4f8ebce-671dd5c26a50af31.gif</thumbnail_url><duration>271.014</duration><title>2026-06-05 Create Atlassian API Tokens for Confluence</title><description>This Loom shows two ways to authenticate and call a Confluence Wiki REST API group endpoint using Atlassian API tokens. For a personal Atlassian account, the author creates an API token under id.atlassian.com by going to Security, then API tokens, and then Create and manage, and uses basic auth with email as the username and the raw API token as the password (no encoding in their example). They note the group/user endpoint mentioned is deprecated, so the URL may differ based on what you are fetching. For a service account, an org admin creates a Confluence service account in admin.atlassian.com, grants Confluence group read and write plus Confluence user access, creates a Confluence API token with scopes, then uses api.atlassian.com with the site Cloud ID and a Bear token in the request URL.</description></oembed>