At 09:34 AM 8/30/00 -0700, Ed Gerck wrote: > >BTW, many lawyers like to use PGP and it is a good usage niche. Here, in the >North Bay Area of SF, PGP is not uncommon in such small-group business users. How do they exchange public keys? Via email I'll bet. Bitpushing MDs should be another 'good niche' ---but not many shrinks counsel on line (what if someone in an Antarctic station flips out?). I wonder what teleradiologists use.
- reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web of Trust Greg Rose
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web of ... Nelson Minar
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web of ... Ed Gerck
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the... Arnold G. Reinhold
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Bill Frantz
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the... Dan Geer
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... P.J. Ponder
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyser... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, ke... Ray Dillinger
- Re: reflecting on PGP, ke... Ted Lemon
- Re: reflecting on PGP, ke... Ray Dillinger