I tried this (as well as the KeyMapping described on https://gpgtools.tenderapp.com/kb/how-to/add-email-address-to-existing-public-key-domain-mapping-group-feature) and still no luck; it's not finding the key. I tried both the key-id and the fingerprint (the docs on the gpgtools site say fingerprint, not key-id), and it still can't find it. Using MM 6208 on Sequoia 15.1.1 and GPG Suite 3579n. Any other ideas?

pr
--
Pete Resnick https://www.episteme.net/
All connections to the world are tenuous at best

On 12 Jan 2025, at 14:47, Robert Goldman wrote:

Yes, this can be done by configuring GPG appropriately. This is the same configuration that you need to do in order to PGP encrypt to a mailing list, where you need GPG to know that it must encrypt the email to each of the PGP keys of the recipients.

You can do this:

```
group <email address> = <key-id>+
```

Best,
R



On 11 Jan 2025, at 14:54, Pete Resnick via mailmate wrote:

Is it possible to send a message to u...@example.com that is PGP encrypted with the key of u...@stupid.test? For "reasons", u...@example.com is not listed as one of the alternate addresses in the key for u...@stupid.test.

pr
--
Pete Resnick https://www.episteme.net/
All connections to the world are tenuous at best
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