On Fri, Mar 26, 2004 at 02:32:30PM -0600, Kirk Strauser wrote: | At 2004-03-26T20:11:42Z, Bill Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: | | > (and don't tell me to get them to switch off of Outlook. like the | > proverbial blond, you can lead a die-hard M$ user to water, but you can't | > make them think.) | | The only solution I know of is to configure your client to use | recipient-specific signing methods, which is what I've done with Gnus. | Email groups are signed by PGP/MIME, Usenet groups get signed inline, and | certain users get inline or no signatures, depending on how I've set them | up. | | Anybody know how Outlook 2003 handles PGP/MIME signatures?
It works. One of my roommates uses it now, and he can read my messages without excessive hassle. In addition, it has a menu for PGP stuff. I don't know how complete it is or if it automatically verifies or anything, but at least it displays the text of the message. (before this past summer/fall he was using OE and experienced the infamous invisible-message bug) -D -- \begin{humor} Disclaimer: If I receive a message from you, you are agreeing that: 1. I am by definition, "the intended recipient" 2. All information in the email is mine to do with as I see fit and make such financial profit, political mileage, or good joke as it lends itself to. In particular, I may quote it on USENET or the WWW. 3. I may take the contents as representing the views of your company. 4. This overrides any disclaimer or statement of confidentiality that may be included on your message \end{humor} www: http://dman13.dyndns.org/~dman/ jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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