Hello, Bob Proulx transcribed 2.2K bytes: > Hello ng0, > > ng0 wrote: > > I lost access to the domain I registered my old account (ng0) > > with, therefore I have registered a new account (ng0_). > > It would be nicer to reclaim your previous account ng0. I see that > you had registered a gpg key with your ng0 account. Do you still have > access to that key 0x02A296150C201823? If so please send us a signed > email (by any method I can verify) with this request and we will > reclaim your previous account.
I no longer have access to this gpg key: user@abyayala ~$ gpg --list-keys 0x02A296150C201823 pub rsa4096/0x02A296150C201823 2016-05-01 [SC] [revoked: 2016-05-01] Key fingerprint = 1321 2A27 975A F076 77A2 9F70 02A2 9615 0C20 1823 But I think using my gnunet.org blog to make a statement which I will sign with the last key I made a release with (which is no longer in practical use, but will never be revoked): user@abyayala ~$ gpg --list-keys 0xACBC390F7CB7D667 pub ed25519/0xACBC390F7CB7D667 2017-03-26 [SC] Key fingerprint = 4E87 D27C 7014 FC53 B004 D17D ACBC 390F 7CB7 D667 uid [ultimate] n...@no-reply.pragmatique.xyz See https://gnunet.org/node/2647 for the last use of this key. > > But I had to find out that my password is "invalid" in the > > Account verification dialogue. > > Unfortunately there is a problem in the system where things can get > stuck betwix and between. Your account activation of the new account > is stuck in this stuck state. We could fix that. But I will wait for > your response to the gpg question above first. > > I take social engineering attacks to take over other people's accounts > seriously. But also with sympathy to the people trying to recover > their own accounts. There are other ways that we might verify your > account access. Such as through https://people.pragmatique.xyz/ng0/ > or https://gnunet.org/blog/8872 or something showing a long historical > presence using that name. As mentioned aboved, I will do the signed post. I hope that is enough? > But if you can use your gpg key then let's > do that and stop there. :-) > > Bob Thanks -- ng0 OpenPG: A88C8ADD129828D7EAC02E52E22F9BBFEE348588