Understood. Thanks for your help. :) Regards. M.
On 4/13/07, Sven Radde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > The export only gives an attacker convenient access to the key file. But > if he can run gpg commands, he could just copy your secring.gpg anyway, > so he already has access to the secret key. Asking for a passphrase to > export the key would not change anything. > In fact, if you do not intentionally share your user account on your > machine, accessing the secret keyring file itself might be achieved far > easier (i.e. via insecure file permissions on ~/.gnupg) than running > GnuPG commands under your user account. > > So, make sure that nobody except you can execute "gpg > --export-secret-key" (on your keyrings) in the first place... :-) > > cu, Sven > _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users