On 03/20/10 19:15, Robert J. Hansen wrote: > On 3/20/2010 9:09 PM, Doug Barton wrote: >> Here are my choices for the various options, I'm curious if anyone sees >> anything glaringly horrible about them. :) > > ObAdvice: it's probably best to stick with the defaults unless you've > got clear needs the defaults don't meet. Or, if you just like to tinker > around with things.
Guilty. :) >> Here is where I differ from the defaults. I understand the argument >> about a 1,000 meter wall vs. a 100,000 meter wall, however the larger >> key doesn't make any appreciable difference to the encrypted file size, >> and I like the idea of having an encryption key large enough that I >> don't have to worry about things staying encrypted for the foreseeable >> future. > > Large keys like this may give you some headaches down the road. > Increasingly, we're moving to a handheld culture: whether a BlackBerry, > an iPhone or an Android, the cell phone is becoming increasingly > important as an electronic communications tool. > > It's reasonable to think that in the next five years OpenPGP will come > to cell phones in one way or another. If so, you will discover that 4k > encryption keys are painfully slow on handheld devices. Yes, that's a consideration, however in 5 years we'll have had at least 2 iterations of Moore's Law, and in my experience so far I do much more signing than I do encryption. Thanks for the review. :) Doug -- ... and that's just a little bit of history repeating. -- Propellerheads Improve the effectiveness of your Internet presence with a domain name makeover! http://SupersetSolutions.com/ _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users