Steven W. Orr wrote the following on 8/21/09 10:28 AM: > I decided to try sending my email with a signature attached instead of using > an inline signature. Now my friend with Outlook Express is telling me that the > message body is blank and that in order for him to see the message, he now has > to open the text attachment. (He is not verifying the signature.) I'm using > gpg2/Thunderbird/Enigmail and I sent a message to an address which then > forwards back to me. Here's the structure I see when it comes back:
Hi Steven, that is the structure that I can see when I chose View/Message source. [cut] > > Should I not be using the MIME signature or is there something he should > change at his end (besides OE), or is this question something that is not gpg2 > related in the first place? > > TIA I believe that's the way Windows Outlook Express (paired with some crypto module that is installed by the GnuPG4Win installer, for all I know) processes OpenPGP/MIME messages. If you friend is willing to use e.g. Thunderbird, he will get a completely different rendering of an incoming OpenPGP/MIME e-mail. This is neither GnuPG nor gpg2 related. Take care, Charly MacOS 10.5.8-MacBook Intel C2Duo 2GHz-GnuPG 1.4.10rc1-MacGPG 2.0.12 TB 2.0.0.23+EM 0.96.0-Apple's Mail+GPGMail 1.2.0 (v56), Key: 0xA57A8EFA _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users