> So I would prefer to work with a CA where it is not a *necessary* > condition for a revocation. Why would someone grabbing your red and blue disks compromise your key? You have it encrypted, right? The encryption key is only present in wetware, right? :'} I generally don't think of "somebody stealing the red and blue disks" as the way that keys get compromised - rather, keys get compromised because someone successfully tricks you into revealing them, perhaps with a trojan horse, and when you realize the key has been compromised (hopefully quickly) you revoke it. Am I dreaming here? _MelloN_
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the... Bill Frantz
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- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and the Web... David Honig
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- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers, and... David Honig
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Ray Dillinger
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Ted Lemon
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Ray Dillinger
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Derek Atkins
- Re: reflecting on PGP, keyservers... Ted Lemon
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