On 25/08/12 01:59, Faramir - faramir...@gmail.com wrote:
IMHO, the main trouble probably is people don't feel the need to protect their privacy. If they don't feel that need, why should they bother in learning, or even asking about privacy software?
Why "trouble"? There's a leitmotif in all those (mostly hopelessly out-dated!) papers, and indeed in a number of postings here, that laments the fact that only a minuscule fraction of e-mail communication is encrypted. There seems to be some desire to convince people who (as you say) "don't feel the need to protect their privacy" to reconsider. Somewhere above, someone even said something as silly as "convincing people that PKI adds benefit to their lives". I personally don't share the motivation; especially so when this "convincing" begins to border on proselytizing. People either feel a need to protect their privacy or they do not, and in either case, I fail to see why anyone feels the need to change their minds. (The only exception I can think of would be a corporation striving to increase the number of potential customers and thus the profit - but that can't be the case with GPG, can it?). Surely, the phenomena such as Facebook clearly tells us precisely how the wast majority of the population feels about their privacy and how fruitless this desire to change people's minds about it will turn out to be? In the use-case we are discussing here, there is no convincing to be done at all, we are trying to help a group of people who already put much higher value on their privacy than the average GPG user, and who are attempting to either find or to construct the tool best suited for their needs. The problem, it seems to me, is that in this case the privacy requirements include some elements of anonymity, and that the "stock GPG", which leaves a lot of potentially damaging meta-data "in the clear" and with the heavy integration of PKI/WOT makes it somewhat of a mis-match. Peter M. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users