On 31/10/17 11:56, Lachlan Gunn wrote: > The only difficulty is when the owner doesn't have the secret key > anymore, and so can't re-revoke it. Then you might want to keep it from > being disseminated further.
Revocations are done by the primary key. If the user has lost the secret primary, they should fetch their revocation certificate, not fool around with the subkeys ;-). (Incidentally, this is why you don't need revocation certificates for individual subkeys.) I'm glad we agree, because I didn't sleep so well and I see I'm making mistakes :-D. The [1] in: I suppose a system checking for ROCA might rightfully take offense at a subkey revoked as "superseded" or "lost"[1], because with ROCA it is actually "compromised". should have been a footnote: [1] Lachlan indicates "lost" is also treated as "signatures before revocation date remain valid", but I haven't checked myself. HTH, Peter. -- 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://digitalbrains.com/2012/openpgp-key-peter>
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