On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 14:56, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> if there is only one keyring, it should be the *gnupg* one,
> which pgp can read,
> but should *not* write to, or it can corrupt the gnupg keyring
You probably can guess my usual remark:
The format gpg's keyring is not a standard but an intera
In PGP desktop 9.5, I can delete a designated revoker from my keyring.
Having used GnuPG pretty much exclusively, I was under the impression
this was impossible. It wouldn't be an issue, but having torn my hair
out for several days over why CACert's OpenPGP signature system wouldn't
sign my key, I
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: RIPEMD160
On 2007/03/13 11:11:58 AM -0400, starsipping <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone know how to modify when GPGRelay can prompt for the
> passphrase to force it to prompt upon initial startup or upon initial
> receipt of email?
Click on the GP
On Wed, 14 Mar 2007 22:32, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Now seems like a good time to ask for an option like:
>
> --require-sig-from [ ...]
>
> to make sure sigs are only from particular signers.
You can do the same by using gpgv it verifies only if the key is in a
special keyring. I am not sure
On Thu, 15 Mar 2007 01:20, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Is the smartcard-reader-pinpad function only available under
> linux-system or should this work under windows ?
Yes.
There are no plans to support it for Windows. Unless we decide to
really port GnuPG-2 to Windows. That may or may not happen
>Message: 3
>Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2007 18:59:28 -0400
>From: "John W. Moore III" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: PGP Desktop & GnuPG
>To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
>Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
>using *one* Keyring for both PGP & GPG.
caveat:
if there is only o