Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote: > On 03/05/2010 01:30 AM, Smith, Cathy wrote: >> The gpg --list-sig shows that the keys are signed. Do I need to create a >> new signature key, and re-sign all the public keys that I imported? > > I think the simplest thing for you to do is to modify the ownertrust of > your old signing key on the new installation. That is, you say that all > the keys are signed, presumably by some particular key that you used in > your PGP installation. Let's pretend that key's ID is 0xDECAFBAD. > PGP and GnuPG have different mechanisms for marking the trust of a signing key. In PGP, it's called 'Implicit Trust' and is a check box in Key Properties. It's stored as part of the key. In GnuPG, the same trust level is called 'Ultimate trust' and trust values are stored in a separate file, trustdb.gpg. It's the most common problem I've seen when a user migrates keyrings.
Having done this migration several times to answer migrating users' questions, I can confirm the 'proper' solution is as Daniel suggested: edit your signing key(s) and set the trust level to ultimate. 'Trust' will then propagate from your key to the keys you have signed. -- John P. Clizbe Inet:John (a) Mozilla-Enigmail.org You can't spell fiasco without SCO. hkp://keyserver.gingerbear.net or mailto:pgp-public-k...@gingerbear.net?subject=help Q:"Just how do the residents of Haiku, Hawai'i hold conversations?" A:"An odd melody / island voices on the winds / surplus of vowels"
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