Am Mo den 31. Jan 2022 um 22:39 schrieb jonkomer via Gnupg-users: > But the reason for my original post was not to find > better ways of communication mechanics while the > relationship exists, it was specific and quite narrow: > how can both sides do all they reasonably can in order > to avoid making it public knowledge that the > relationship existed *after it has been dissolved*. > > There is significant difference between a one-time > "third-party" correspondent misusing his knowledge of > the relationship after it has been dissolved, from > that same knowledge being published in perpetuity via > a simple, automated Internet query. Specifically, > the question was if there is any mitigation against > the action of an uninformed (or, perhaps by a stretch, > malicious?) correspondent adding signatures and > uploading the key to the network of synchronizing > pubkey servers. Well, there is none.
Well, there is no technology that can ever prevent that human error/fault. What you want is simply not possible. Even if there is technology to prevent the upload to a key server, someone could just publish your key via twitter, or put it into bitcoin keychain or via any other way you might imagine. And even if he is not in possession of the original key, he can create a own key (setting date to somewhen in the past) with you mail address and publish it. Or what does prevent others to create a facebook account in your name? You would have pretty much trouble to get that facebook account removed again. The problem, you described, is a human problem, not a technical one. GDPR cannot prevent leaks. And when it is leaked, there is no law that could remove the data again. You can remove it from one platform but the ghost is out of the bottle. GDPR is, as I already told, just a nearly lame duck that just ignores how technology and internet works. Regards Klaus -- Klaus Ethgen http://www.ethgen.ch/ pub 4096R/4E20AF1C 2011-05-16 Klaus Ethgen <kl...@ethgen.ch> Fingerprint: 85D4 CA42 952C 949B 1753 62B3 79D0 B06F 4E20 AF1C
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