Hi, I'm using PGP Desktop 9.8 and I noticed when I export a public key from GPG and import it in PGP, any trust signatures made on it with GPG and given a depth greater than 8 are lost. Presumably this is because of constraints within PGP, IE the maximum trust depth that can be set in PGP for a signature is 8.
I was wondering if anyone can provide a rationalization for why this is? Ostensibly even a trust signature of depth 2 carries enormous power with it, but there is no such cap on GPG. Furthermore, why are signatures in GPG with a trust depth greater than 9 marked as a 'T' on listings, even though the depth of the signature still matters (e.g. a trust signature with a depth of 14 is still more powerful than one of depth 12, even though they're both labelled 'T'). Many thanks, George P.S. Sorry about the flurry of questions recently. I'm new to GPG and PGP, have searched the list archives but I'd like to have greater in-depth knowledge on some issues. -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/PGP-doesn%27t-import-trust-signatures-w--depth-%3E-8-on-keys-exported-with-GPG-tp17829687p17829687.html Sent from the GnuPG - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users