I am using gpg 1.0.3 but i think that that's not the problem here. The
only thing i can think of in your case is that probably you have the
options directory in a different location from ~/.gnupg, in which case
you would have to set up a variable GNUPGHOME=/your/gnupg/directory in
/etc/profile.

Marcelo C. Martinelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 12:09:04PM -0400, Bob Bell wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 01:06:39PM +0000, Marcelo C . Martinelli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
>wrote:
> > I think that's a gpg problem and not a mutt one. You should edit the
> > file ``options" which is created by default during installation of gpg
> > under ~/.gnupg. You should add 2 lines in there like these:
> > 
> > no-secmem-warning
> > keyserver wwwkeys.pgp.net
> > 
> > The first line will get rid of the insecure memory warning, which i've
> > been told you can safely disregard.
> 
>     Is this a new feature in gpg.  This doesn't appear to get rid of the
> warning for me.  gpg --version reports "gpg (GnuPG) 1.0.1".
> 
> 
> -- 
> Bob Bell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
>  "For example, OS/360 devotes 26 bytes of the permanently
>   resident date-turnover routine to the proper handling of
>   December 31 on leap years (when it is Day 366).  That might
>   have been left to the operator."
>    -- Fred Brooks, _The Mythical Man-Month_, on wasting resources

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