Hi, I am using Debian 10. My key was verified... I think you are right. At that time (~3yrs back) I more worried about spam from publishing it on the keyserver.
I'm pretty sure that is what it is. I didn't verify my email. Since I was using the same machine to know more about gpg, it wasn't a problem, it was reading my keyring. Thank you! I would have never figured it out. Cheers! On Thu, 2022-02-10 at 14:50 +0000, Andrew Gallagher via Gnupg-users wrote: > On 10/02/2022 13:23, Raja Saha wrote: > > I created the subkey, output it to a file and imported it to gpg on > > working dir. Then I sent the key to the keyserver, gpg --send-keys > > *****. After that when I searched the keyserver by my email it, > > there > > was no key. When I searched by my key > > F01D54EDAEB1700EBEDE6FC6C0A9DE3BFEFD07E2 (now revoked) it was > > there. > > When I imported it, it didn't have a mail id. > > What OS are you using? The default keyserver depends on your linux > distro, and the default in Debian-based distros (keys.openpgp.org) > doesn't serve userIDs by default. If you published your key there > and > then imported it into a different keyring, it wouldn't have come > with > the userID unless you went through their email verification procedure > first. > > _______________________________________________ > Gnupg-users mailing list > Gnupg-users@gnupg.org > https://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org https://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users