On 3/9/2011 10:42 PM, Ben McGinnes wrote: > Which brings us back to creating a pseudonym, using Tor (or other > anonymising services), getting a disposable mail drop (or using > alt.anonymous.messages) and going from there. At the bare minimum.
Which brings us back to the elephant in the middle of the room: as far as I can see there's no consensus on a use case for this feature. Some people have a knee-jerk reaction to their email addresses being in any searchable database and want their emails obfuscated. Against this threat, the proposed feature doesn't work: email addresses don't offer enough entropy and the mechanism could be brute-forced. Some people think they're going to take over the People's Republic of Berkeley in a military coup and need to be able to deny their connections to each other. Against this threat, the proposed feature doesn't work very well: while you could conceivably come up with an email address with high enough entropy, it's easier to just use anonymous services and dead-drop emails. Has a use case been articulated for this feature, along with how this feature would substantially advance the use case? Because if not, one really needs to be. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users