Hi Peter, > On 13 Feb 2017, at 12:16, Peter Lebbing <pe...@digitalbrains.com> wrote: > > > An OpenPGP public key is composed of many parts which can be reordered > without changing the meaning. Keyservers do reorder stuff, so you can't > just compare two keys byte by byte and say anything useful about their > equivalence. > > A command like > > $ gpg2 --list-options show-unusable-subkeys,show-unusable-uids > --list-sigs [KEYID] > > gives a pretty good overview of a public key.
I tried that out with my two public key representations. There was a diff between the two keys. The trust level of my two IDs was `unknown` in the one public key and `ultimate` in the other key. Maybe this is the reason why the armor output is different. I mean it make sense when the key server will change the trust level of the given user-id to `unknown` while uploading. > I've changed your e-mail address so web spam scrapers can't take it > easily. ;) Thx! > If you see all the components there really are on your key > reflected in this output, then the keyserver is already fully up to date > and any further sending of your key will not change it any further. This was the case except of the trust level. > > HTH, > > Peter. Thank you. Very helpful. Marko --- Marko Bauhardt https://keybase.io/mbauhardt GPG Key ID: 53192101 GPG Fingerprint: DC0F E851 82A3 72E3 7FE1 ACDB 970C FD47 5319 2101
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