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On 08/06/12 22:41, Sam Smith wrote:
> 
> Another thing is that downloading the key from that link you provided is no 
> guarantee of safety in and of itself either because the page is not being 
> hosted over SSL with confirmed identity information. So technically there's 
> no guarantee I'm actually interacting with teh GnuPG.org website.
> 
> 
> 
>> Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2012 05:23:43 +0100
>> From: da...@gbenet.com
>> To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>> Subject: Re: can someone verify the gnupg Fingerprint for pubkey?
>>
> On 07/06/12 00:15, Sam Smith wrote:
>>>> yes, impersonation of the UID [Werner Koch (dist sig)] is what I'm trying 
>>>> to guard against.
>>>>
>>>> My efforts to verify the fingerprint are the best way to do this, correct?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Date: Wed, 6 Jun 2012 21:54:01 +0200
>>>>> From: pe...@digitalbrains.com
>>>>> To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>>>>> Subject: Re: can someone verify the gnupg Fingerprint for pubkey?
>>>>>
>>>>> On 06/06/12 17:58, Mika Suomalainen wrote:
>>>>>>> D869 2123 C406 5DEA 5E0F 3AB5 249B 39D2 4F25 E3B6
>>>>>> Looks correct.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ``` % gpg --recv-keys D8692123C4065DEA5E0F3AB5249B39D24F25E3B6 gpg:
>>>>>> requesting key 4F25E3B6 from hkp server pool.sks-keyservers.net gpg: key
>>>>>> 4F25E3B6: public key "Werner Koch (dist sig)" imported
>>>>>
>>>>> I agree it appears he has the correct key. I did a local sig on it after 
>>>>> what
>>>>> checking I seemed to be able to do without meeting people in person.
>>>>>
>>>>> But it's a bit unclear to me on what basis you decided it looked correct? 
>>>>> Your
>>>>> mail suggests to me that you decided that based on the fact that the UID 
>>>>> on
>>>>> that key is "Werner Koch (dist sig)". But that would be the very first 
>>>>> thing a
>>>>> potential attacker would duplicate in his effort to fool our OP. Even if 
>>>>> he's
>>>>> using MITM tricks to subvert his system, he can still post his personally
>>>>> generated key to the keyserver with this UID.
>>>>>
>>>>> Peter.
>>>>>
>>>>> PS: I briefly considered signing this message, because the attacker might 
>>>>> MITM
>>>>> my message to the OP. Then I realised what good that signature would do 
>>>>> :).
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> I use the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) in combination with Enigmail.
>>>>> You can send me encrypted mail if you want some privacy.
>>>>> My key is available at http://wwwhome.cs.utwente.nl/~lebbing/pubkey.txt
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> Gnupg-users mailing list
>>>>> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>>>>> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> Gnupg-users mailing list
>>>> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>>>> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
> 
> Sam,
> 
> You are a little confused - you ask ask "can some one verify the gnupg 
> fingerprint for
> pubkey" and you use Verners key to verify gnupg. Then you worry about 
> impersonation - now
> clearly Verner and gnupg have different keys. Or don't you know that?
> 
> Clearly you failed to follow my link and clearly you failed to check the 
> public key for
> gnupg. Now being a little confused try and get a clear question in your mind 
> - is it
> Verner's key that you have such a passion to verify or gnupg?
> 
> Verner's had about three keys two of which have expired - to the best of  my 
> knowledge he's
> a real person - he even maintains this list. You could always try encrypting  
> an e-mail to
> his public key asking him if he's a real person. I'd suggest you not do the 
> same for the
> public key of gnupg.
> 
> People generate a private and a public key imaginary people don't do this - 
> granted some one
> can set up a false ID and create a set of keys - but though they have created 
> a false ID to
> do so they are nevertheless real people.
> 
> If you are so concerned about Verner's key why not take a trip to Germany and 
> arrange to
> meet him? You can't meet the gnupg (as its a bit of software) but you can 
> verify it's
> running on your computer.
> 
> All your keys are "untrusted." Everyone of them - apart from your own public 
> key. They all
> remain so until you actually meet that person and verify that they are who 
> they say they
> are. You carefully check their passport their driving licence.
> 
> But gnupg has not got a passport or a driving license. The only way you can 
> check if gnupg
> is real is to check if it's running on your computer gpg --version - this 
> will tell you if
> you have the software installed. If it's installed and working correctly it 
> must be real.
> 
> What if that fails? Well you do the same thing gpg2 --version and hope that 
> Verner does not
> pop up and say "Hello."
> 
> David
> 
> 
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Gnupg-users mailing list
>> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
>                                         
Sam,

You have to apply some logic - and some common sense. I have about 180 public 
keys - all
apart from about 5 or 6 are untrusted. Now a lot of people have my public key 
say 175 and
all those people have my public key marked as untrusted.

The whole idea behind the web of trust is that you have met "real" people. On 
the whole most
people are who they say they are - but with all systems you get people using 
fake IDs.

Now Werner Koch has a reality - he writes GPG4Win GNUpg and maintains this list 
- but
because I've not met him (though I have exchanged e-mails with him) I have not 
signed his key.

Why?

The whole principle underlining the web of trust is that you  have met that 
person in the
real world and to the best of your knowledge - they are who they say they are 
and their
public key belongs to them.

It is a principle of the whole system that you only sign people's keys. The 
person comes
first - not the key.

It's not the validity of keys but the validity of people. So in your every day 
life you
accept that the train  driver the bus driver the person behind the bar - your 
wife and kids
are all living real and normal lives. Now, your wife and kids aare somewhat 
different. You
married your wife and thus can trust she presented to you a real ID. You had 
sexual
intercourse with this real person (your wife) and she as a result of that 
intercourse
produced your kids.

Your relationship to your wife and kids is special - you trust that they are 
really real and
you believe it to be true. And why not? You wake up in the morning beside her - 
you watch
your kids grow up. Now 20 years into your marriage you discover that your 
wife's a secret
agent - Jane Brown - not the Mary Smith you thought you married - and that were 
you thought
believed your kids sprung from your seed they were in fact from the milkman. 
The reality -
the belief is she's still your wife and they are your kids - they have behaved 
as such.


Most people are bound up with beliefs and behaviours. They interact with others 
on a daily
basis sharing common values beliefs and behaviours. Under normal conditions we 
don't ask
every one we meet for their passport driving license or DNA sequence. We accept 
it as the
norm that people are real and valid - its the IDs they use which may or maybe 
questionable.

A spy may have say 6 IDs - the IDs are fictitious but the person is real. You 
have lots of
family and friends - who they are - what they are changes overtime and  changes 
because of
the  conditions under which you meet them - they could  be a Father a Professor 
- an Olympic
Javelin thrower - then Retired - then dead. All these are IDs - which govern 
your
behavioural interaction with that person. What do you trust? That you hear them 
speak? You
have shaken them by the hand? Gone down the pub with them?

In truth we can not say that all these IDs are "real" neither can we say they 
are "false."
But we interact with them and so build a reality of behaviours - sharing common 
interests
and values and beliefs. Just like all these people on this mailing list. People 
are real.
Though they may have many identities.

It is common practice to accept people at "face value" - even if you only 
"know" them from
being on a mailing list. It is by common interaction "communication" that one 
reinforces
one's own belief systems and we accept the commonly held belief that we are 
interacting with
a real person - we through our own perception then make judgements about that 
person - we
like them or we don't - we admire and respect them or we don't we trust what 
they have to
say or we don't.

We make value judgements about real people - no matter what ID they present to 
us. It's the
"face value" which is the key. Have we met the person? We affirm the reality of 
people via
our social networking. Mary knows Bob - Bob knows Harry and Harry knows Mary. 
You can ask
Bob and Harry to confirm that it is really is Mary that you are talking too. We 
all can
confirm to some degree the reality of Werner Koch - by what he does. But I have 
not met him
in any social network other than this and other mailing lists.

So people on this mailing list "know" that Werner Koch is "real." You can send 
him an
encrypted e-mail and if he has your public key reply to you. The "reality" is 
we make people
"personal" to ourselves by interacting with them. If we don't interact we don't 
build any
models in our minds. If say 5 people said  that they had actually met Werner in 
the flesh -
at face value - you would accept that Werner Koch was who he said he was.

We assign material documents to give validity to real people. People come first 
not the
documentation. A public key is such a document. A person may generate many 
public keys - the
person is the real validity. You do not affirm a level of trust in the public 
key. You
affirm a level of trust in the person. So all your public keys are 
untrustworthy except for
those people that you have met. So even though I and many others have exchanged 
e-mails with
Werner Koch his public key remains untrusted.

Likewise you can not meet face to face with a bit of software though you may 
affirm its on
your computer and you may affirm by interacting with it - the fact remains the 
public key
remains untrustworthy.

I have lots of keys - 98 per cent are "untrustworthy." It's normal. It is not 
the same as
having the perception of an untrustworthy person - which is based on our 
perception oof the
value system we place on their behaviours. A public key is a static document - 
whereas
people - those that are alive have values belief systems and behaviours that 
interact with
other human beings out of common interests and goals. Some people have a mind 
set that says
"that person is real therefore their documents are real." Then they form value 
judgements on
that documentation - to trust or not to trust - as though they were interacting 
with real
people.

In reality we can not judge the value of documents. In reality we can judge the 
value of
people. We make value judgements about people all the time - based on their 
interaction with
us - our mood - how we feel at any given time. We interpretate according to our 
reality and
perceptions.

What is our "reality" about public key encryption? The validation of public 
keys? The
validation of real people? We almost forget why we want public key encryption - 
so that only
the recipient can read our e-mails. The "recipient" is a person - their public 
key is merely
a tool to which software on your computer can encrypt to their public key. 
That's the only
reality a public key has. It is not a seal of authenticity - not a rubber 
stamp. It has no
power vested in it as to give "authority." It is merely a means for secure 
communications
over an insecure network.

The web of trust - signing people's keys is based on people meeting face to 
face and
interacting in a social network - it is not about the level of trust one has in 
the public
key. A keys "validity" is it works. The validity is the recipient of an 
encrypted message
can decrypt it. All keys are valid in this respect. They are in a sense all 
trustworthy. All
keys do what they say they can do. Without any failure. So you need not set any 
level of
trust on keys because they work perfectly.

The "trust" is in the person - not the public key. So some would argue that 
signing Werner's
key is crazy - has no logic and a miss-placed value system. I'd have to agree.

David


- -- 
“See the sanity of the man! No gods, no angels, no demons, no body. Nothing of 
the
kind.Stern, sane,every brain-cell perfect and complete even at the moment of 
death. No
delusion.” https://linuxcounter.net/user/512854.html - http://gbenet.com/blog
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