well someday i may find this fascinating, but for the moment
i'd really like to just have it percolate in 'run silent, run
deep' mode.

On Sat, Sep 16, 2000 at 01:26:50PM +0000, Tom Gilbert wrote:
> [-- PGP output follows (current time: Sun Sep 17 00:45:07 2000) --]
> gpg: Signature made Sat Sep 16 08:26:50 2000 CDT using DSA key ID 63CF8B95
> gpg: Good signature from "Tom Gilbert (www.linuxbrit.co.uk) <[EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]>"
> gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!
> gpg:          There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner.
> gpg: Fingerprint: 863D 9C6D 783B 0C70 406D  5B40 E9F2 5583 63CF 8B95
> [-- End of PGP output --]
> 
> [-- The following data is PGP/MIME signed --]
> 
> * will trillich ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > i don't give a whit about signing my messages; unless we're passing
> > munitions details during a war, i don't see the importance (at least
> > none of my ramblings are even CLOSE to needing any certification or
> > verification). i just wanna get rid of the 
> >     gpg: Can't check signature: public key not found
> > message... i guess i should learn to live with it.
> 
> You could either:
> a) live with it
> b) see if the person has put their key on a webpage for you to grab
> c) use a keyserver
> 
> (c) is preferable, it works great. Add something like:
> 
> keyserver wwwkeys.pgp.net
> 
> To your ~/.gnupg/options file.

cool tip. thanks. kinda neat, really.

now, i get more verbosity than ever (see above) but i'll have
a look to see if i can give gpg a 'shaddap' option...

Reply via email to