On Wed, Aug 22, 2007 at 03:34:50PM -0500, John Clizbe wrote: > > Alex wrote: > >> Yes, common sense. if you submit your key to a keyserver, there > >> should be some way to distinguish your key from hundreds of > >> other having the same short name, when searching for a key. > > > > Sorry, I forgot to say that I don't use any keyservers. Only my > > friends can get my private e-mail address and "private" public key.
> Relying on the 'highly effective" Security via Obscurity model, huh? > > There's no guarantee that your key won't end up on a keyserver nor is there > one > that your "private" email address won't leak into the public, There were people that submitted their whole keyrings to keyservers. And yesterday I got spammed to address that I created for one-time use for one person, and never gave publicly nor to anyone else. a -- JID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP: 0x46399138 od zwracania uwagi na detale są lekarze, adwokaci, programiści i zegarmistrze -- Czerski _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users