If something is important enough to affect how they communicate, don't assume: ask.
We asked. They are reluctant to do any "installs" just in order to evaluate our business proposition.
My MacBook didn't come with GnuPG installed. I had to do that myself.
Understood. We would love for Apple to have gpg1 as part of "standard app repertoire" - just as some/many Linux distributions do. That, however, is something we can neither influence nor hope for.
If you have a workflow dependency on GnuPG, you are insisting your users install it.
See above. There is quite a bit of difference between installing an application, and downloading a trusted binary with no dependencies and executing it in the shell. BTW., all we what to do here is to use the same model that we know (based on experience) works perfectly well for MS Windows and Linux users, and make it available to Apple users. R. Bag _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org https://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users