I am subscribed to a couple of Yahoo mailing lists, "bjh" for fans of Barclay James Harvest and "progressivemusicforum" for general discussion of progressive rock.
The Yahoo list server strips all attachments from mail to the "bjh" list - including PGP signatures. Grrr. So I set "pgp_create_traditional" in mutt in order to produce an inline signature. Result? The posting is rejected entirely. The Yahoo list server sees the header "Content-Type: application/pgp; x-action=sign; format=text", ignores the "format=text", thinks "This is not a plain text message" and bounces the posting with an error message saying that "only plain text messages are allowed". I notice that some PGP users on this list post inline-signed messages, with "Content-Type:" headers such as: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-action=pgp-signed and I would like to know: 1) Are these "Content-Type:" headers in any way modified/rewritten by the [digest version of] the Debian list server? 2) If (1) is false, are any of our inline-signers using mutt? (The digest server's header weeding prevents me from determining this by inspecting the headers.) 3) If (2) is true, how does one configure mutt to produce an inline-signed message with a "Content-Type: text/plain;...." header instead of "...application/pgp;...format=text"? The otherwise very comprehensive documentation when you hit F1 gives me no clue on this. (Of course, I have complained to Yahoo about this (and have also complained about the "progressivemusicforum" list server, which doesn't strip PGP signatures, but does sometimes mangle the bodies of signed messages) and (not much to my surprise) have received no response.) -- Pigeon Be kind to pigeons Get my GPG key here: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x21C61F7F
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Description: PGP signature