> What are the ramifications of just saying "yes" to the prompt - update 
> preferences?  How potentially serious is the algorithm mismatch?  I'd like to 
> better understand exactly what is happening.

Ever since the very early days, PGP has supported a cryptographic algorithm 
called IDEA.  Back in the early '90s IDEA was considered a strong, promising 
cipher.  Time has not been kind to it.  The current judgment of IDEA is that it 
is strong *enough*, but not really strong, and it is not considered especially 
promising.  It is also subject to software patents.  For these reasons, the 
current revision of the OpenPGP specification does not require or recommend 
that implementations support IDEA.

(The OpenPGP *specification* is not the same thing as PGP or GnuPG, which are 
*implementations* -- in the same way that Outlook and Thunderbird *implement* 
email protocols, but those protocols are *specified* in other places.)

Anyway.  By default, GnuPG does not support IDEA.  PGP does, mostly because 
they still have customers who need it.  Different strokes for different folks.

What GnuPG is warning you about is, "your current key says that other people 
can use IDEA when sending you encrypted email.  I can't read IDEA.  This will 
be a problem if anyone sends you IDEA-encrypted traffic.  Would you like for me 
to change your key so that other people can know not to send you IDEA traffic?"

I'm hedging my bets a little bit, since I don't know enough about your specific 
needs to speak with certainty.  That said, I believe it is safe for you to 
answer "yes" here.


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