Hi, At the place I work they unfortunately use stupid Symantec's "Encryption Desktop" (formerly known as PGP Desktop) software. The desktop portion of that software has an OS/kernel level driver that watches if you're trying to open a PGP encrypted file... then decrypts it on the fly and finally passes it to the application that'd normally open it. I'm the only Linux desktop user here at work and I only call Symantec *stupid* because they seem to find it funny to support Ubuntu 14.04 all the way to 14.04.4 ... but not 14.04.5. Basically 14.04.5 has a newer Linux kernel which breaks the driver, if they could just fix that - they'd also find it is magically fixed for Ubuntu 16.04 too (as it's the same issue in the kernel that uses too). This is especially infuriating as they refer to any request to fix this as a "Feature Request"... which is laughable if you consider the idea of this happening if Windows got a new service pack, that'd get classified instantly as a bug to fix. See... https://support.symantec.com/en_US/article.TECH236718.html See... https://support.symantec.com/en_US/article.INFO3856.html Anyway I can either continue to bitterly rant or convince my employers to switch product. Does GnuPG have a similar kernel module/driver for an as-you-open-a-file type experience? If this doesn't exist in the main GnuPG project then I'd be happy to be referred to any 3rd party bits of software (even if commercial or proprietary) that could? I understand if the answer *should* be block-level encryption... but they're intend on file-level. -- Steven Maddox Lantizia
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