On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 11:55:52PM -0400, Charly Avital wrote: > According to man gpg: > ------------------- > Set the `for your eyes only' flag in the message. This > causes GnuPG to refuse to save the file unless the --output > option is given, and PGP to use the "secure viewer" with a > Tempest-resistant font to display the message. This option > overrides --set-filename. > --no-for-your-eyes-only disables this option. > ------------------ > > In a few tests I did, using gpg 1.4.2rc2, self testing an encrypted > and signed text: > - without --output: the result is a message without text, that shows > 'encrypted,signed' in its > long headers.
I'm afraid I don't know what this means. GnuPG has no such 'long headers', so I assume you're calling it from some front end. > At the receiving end, how does GnuPG processes a message that has > been encrypted using > "--for-your-eyes-only", without --output? Where does the actual text > of the message goes? Is there such a text? In that case GnuPG discards the text and does not save or display it. Davd _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users