On Thu, Apr 25, 2002 at 10:04:39AM -0500, Steve Langasek wrote: > I still don't understand what you mean by a 'without-ID key'. It's > difficult to give you a clear answer unless you can give us tangible > information. A PGP uid has three parts to it: a name, an email address, > and a comment. What does he have in each of these? If the PGP key he's > asking you to sign has a name OTHER than his own on it, then you should > NOT sign it: if anything, you should mention this to his AM.
Ok I clarify : Let say his name is Robert Redford and his email is [EMAIL PROTECTED] Let say that everybody know him as and call him nickmane. So his gpg uid is nickmane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. His email does not contain something that looks like a name. I am sure he is nickname but the ID check is useless. > If he's trying to become a DD, he will need to have a PGP key that has > his real, legal name on it, with a valid email address, and this key > must be signed by an existing DD. If he doesn't have a PGP key that has > his name on it, that's the first step that he must take. Ok but my question is : Can I sign his key as-is ? In my understanding I can but that mean that the NM process is flawless in this regard and is going to reject his key. Christophe > > Steve Langasek > postmodern programmer -- Christophe Barbé <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> GnuPG FingerPrint: E0F6 FADF 2A5C F072 6AF8 F67A 8F45 2F1E D72C B41E People that hate cats will come back as mice in their next life. --Faith Resnick
msg06052/pgp00000.pgp
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