I only replied to Mr. Shaw and not to the list so i send this again. On Fri, 9 Aug 2013 00:09:29 -0400 David Shaw <ds...@jabberwocky.com> wrote:
> There are two namespaces here. If a tag is defined by the IETF > process, then there is no @domain at all. The @domain tags are used > when regular users want to define a tag. > > Anyway, so it's true that you can use the @domain notation to > differentiate between a tag you use and the same tag used by someone > else, but this shouldn't be interpreted as that you should always use > the local domain. The domain is set by whoever defines the tag. > > In this case, the preferred-email-encoding tag was defined by the > pgp.com people. Thus preferred-email-encod...@pgp.com is the proper > string to use. > > David > Yes i understood the two namespaces but i had not understood that the proper domain is the one of the person who defines the tag. I had the impression that everyone should use his own domain. So, in the case of the issuer-fpr notation, which if i am not wrong was introduced by Mr. Gillmor, the proper notation is issuer-...@notations.openpgp.fifthhorseman.net and not issuer-...@my.domain.tld ? Thank you for replying Mr. Shaw. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users