-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 Hi
On Saturday 3 May 2014 at 1:53:41 PM, in <mid:20140503135341.4ca90...@cerberus.dumain.com>, William Hay wrote: > I wonder if discussing terminology separate from the > overall UI is the best idea? I think the discussion has been of some use in aiding some of us's understanding, but has gone at least as far as it usefully could. Provided words/phrases are not recycled in a UI and its FAQ/manual to mean something different to an already-accepted meaning in the context of GnuPG/OpenPGP, I think it matters little which words are used to get across what needs to be conveyed. > However if we're mucking around with terminology can I > suggest replacing the terms key signing and > certificates with the metaphor of 'letters of > introduction'? [...] > Letters of > introduction are not something one encounters much in > the modern world one but tying the process to a > physical analogue might make things easier to > understand. One could recycle old costume dramas to > make tutorials. That is an interesting thought. I wonder how what proportion of the population would know what it meant, unless it appeared in a book they studied at school or a film/TV programme they saw last week. > In normal usage one needs the answer to two questions: > Can I send private messages to this person? Did this > message/file come from the person in question? I would propose a third question: Was the message/file altered in transit? > It gets a bit more complicated when managing/signing > keys but with a GUI one could just present statements > about a key for the user to assent (or not to) without > any need to classify the statement itself. > I (will not say whether|do not know whether|am quite > confident that|am very confident that) this key belongs > to <userid>. Why ask the certification level? What is this information used for? Unless it actually has a real use, the user should not be asked to spend time considering it, it should not be recorded, and certainly should not be published. If somebody thinks they need this, and knows why, they should be able to find it in an "expert" mode. The basic user (and in my opinion, most users) should just have one question but need to answer it in respect of each UID, something like:- "I accept this key for communication with <userid1>. Yes/No" aka <userid2>. Yes/No" aka <userid3>. Yes/No" > Issue letter of introduction: Yes/no? I think this should also be in an "expert" mode, or at least absent from a "basic" mode. And I would prefer something more like "I hereby publicly state that this key belongs to <userid>. Yes/No" With a Yes/No selector for each of the UIDs on the key. The active copy on the user's keyring should get a non-exportable signature whatever the answer, and for each UID where the user answered "Yes" a copy bearing the exportable signature on that UID only should be placed in a message encrypted to that key and pre-addressed to the email address in that UID. > Accept introductions made via this key: (No,In concert > with X others,Yes). Another I think should possibly not be in the "basic" mode. Does an absolute beginner really need to be able to nominate trusted introducers? - -- Best regards MFPA mailto:2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net 1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- iPQEAQEKAF4FAlNlGVZXFIAAAAAALgAgaXNzdWVyLWZwckBub3RhdGlvbnMub3Bl bnBncC5maWZ0aGhvcnNlbWFuLm5ldEJBMjM5QjQ2ODFGMUVGOTUxOEU2QkQ0NjQ0 N0VDQTAzAAoJEKipC46tDG5pBVcEAII7VGBQuIJlBiWbqYbnROpKKba4zNRN+gWR uN9zmr6C/r6Rkr/YNL4vcyckr2vxxvdCcD17sXpaAK5RI3ltG1JyhFW9P1NXOxWE 6wZKoUEIBc8O8Ba99IIzdBzD7J0VrOfh3xvJgrq/lXAZNNYD4OVUAMQEZS6lzgSe 9ESBdSzz =kdgF -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users