On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 02:45:45 Faramir wrote:
> By the way, I saw your message is signed, but I couldn't locate a
copy
> of your public key...
Sorry about that. My comment below should contain the URL for the
key. I
still new to this, and weary about uploading my public key on
keyservers.
Last
Rasta Surfer wrote:
> Is it possible to export a key from GNUPG 1.4.[7,9] and import it into
> PGP 6.5.8?
Yes, but it's generally easier to go the other way around. You'll find
that route to be much easier.
> i know pgp 6.5.8 is older than the hills, i still imagine there is a
> work around for
Is it possible to export a key from GNUPG 1.4.[7,9] and import it into PGP
6.5.8? The purpose is for GNUPG to encrypt a file and PGP to decrypt. I
keep coming up toan error of "encrypted session key is bad" on PGP trying to
decrypt.
Older keys that were imported into PGP have cipher set as CAST
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Allen Schultz escribió:
> On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 10:22 AM, John Clizbe
> wrote:
>> If I don't know the purported key owner I select "I don't know."
...
> Or better yet, Faramir.cl told me to get CAcert.org's gpg key and sign
> it as it is a Certif
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Brian Mearns wrote:
> Is it considered impolite to advertise one specific keyserver (like
> gingerbear, for instance) in my sig?
Not at all! In fact, many use a Comment line to direct folks to Big
Lumber or their Own Web page to locate their Key.
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Felipe Alvarez escribió:
> On Wed, 29 Apr 2009 14:09:52 Faramir wrote:
>> I think he is
>> implementing the tutorial about how to store the main keys at a safe
>> place, and keep the subkeys for daily usage.
>
> Which TUT is that?
This one http://
Hi All,
Thanks to Rainar Sandner and Joseph Oreste Bruni who helped me to reconsider
the whole chain in my running process, the problem is solved.
The problem was that the process invoking the shell script was running on a
different machine and it has been solved in setting the --home-dir to
Brian Mearns wrote:
>
> Thanks, John. I was unaware of the status page, I think that will be
> helpful. I'm not sure offhand which servers have been "buggy", but I
> believe I've connected to http://keys.gnupg.net/ in the past and been
> presented with a blank page, for instance.
Not all servers p
On Apr 29, 2009, at 9:03 AM, Brian Mearns wrote:
So I've been "advertising" keys.gnupg.net as the place to get my key
for a while now, but the round-robin DNS is kind of bugging me. I
understand the purpose of it, but it's kind of a crap shoot: not
infrequently, the address maps to a server that
Joel C. Salomon wrote:
> John W. Moore III wrote:
>> Joel C. Salomon wrote:
>> > I was under the impression that GnuPG kept track of everything, but I
>> > noticed that Windows Privacy Tray and Enigmail do not always show the
>> > same keys.
>> > Can someone explain to me what's going on with my s
John W. Moore III wrote:
> Joel C. Salomon wrote:
> > I was under the impression that GnuPG kept track of everything, but I
> > noticed that Windows Privacy Tray and Enigmail do not always show the
> > same keys.
> >
> > Both are accessing the correct version of GPG (C:\Program
> > Files\GNU\GnuPG\
On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 11:21 AM, John Clizbe wrote:
> Brian Mearns wrote:
>> So I've been "advertising" keys.gnupg.net as the place to get my key
>> for a while now, but the round-robin DNS is kind of bugging me. I
>> understand the purpose of it, but it's kind of a crap shoot: not
>> infrequentl
> I have to use GnuPG in batch mode to enable a running process to decrypt
> encrypted file. If I run the shell script through ssh (with the specific
> user that was previously used to set the keys and has its proper .gnupg
> directory) this works fine despite the following warning: WARNING: messa
Your automated process is not running with the same home directory as
your login shell.
-Joe
On Apr 29, 2009, at 8:24 AM, Schrago, Gerard wrote:
Hi all,
Sorry to insist but I really need someone that can answer my question.
Why a running process cannot decrypt a file while the very same
Hi all,
Sorry to insist but I really need someone that can answer my question.
Why a running process cannot decrypt a file while the very same shell script
invoked within a ssh session does it?
Please!
With my best regards.
Gerard.
-Original Message-
From: Schrago, Gerard
Sent: mardi
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Joel C. Salomon wrote:
> I was under the impression that GnuPG kept track of everything, but I
> noticed that Windows Privacy Tray and Enigmail do not always show the
> same keys.
>
> Both are accessing the correct version of GPG (C:\Program
> Files
I was under the impression that GnuPG kept track of everything, but I
noticed that Windows Privacy Tray and Enigmail do not always show the
same keys.
Both are accessing the correct version of GPG (C:\Program
Files\GNU\GnuPG\gpg.exe), and at least WinPT knows where the GnuPG
keyrings are (C:\Users
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On Wednesday 29 April 2009 15:40:47 Peter Pentchev wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 03:31:51PM +0200, Raimar Sandner wrote:
> > On Wednesday 29 April 2009 12:09:02 Olivier Mehani wrote:
> > > Let me explain: having several background-ish applications m
On Wed, Apr 29, 2009 at 03:31:51PM +0200, Raimar Sandner wrote:
> On Wednesday 29 April 2009 12:09:02 Olivier Mehani wrote:
>
> > Let me explain: having several background-ish applications making use of
> > the agent, it happens that the pinentry sometimes pops out when the
> > passphrase cache ha
On Wed, 29 Apr 2009 14:09:52 Faramir wrote:
> I think he is
> implementing the tutorial about how to store the main keys at a safe
> place, and keep the subkeys for daily usage.
Which TUT is that?
Felipe
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On Wednesday 29 April 2009 12:09:02 Olivier Mehani wrote:
> Let me explain: having several background-ish applications making use of
> the agent, it happens that the pinentry sometimes pops out when the
> passphrase cache has expired. One of my first concerns is that there's
> no way to identify w
Hi GnuPG users,
I'm a happy user of PGP and the GPG agent with it's little friend the
GTK pinentry program to facilitate usage. I've been starting to wonder,
though, how easy it would be to fake a GPG pinentry window.
Let me explain: having several background-ish applications making use of
the a
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Even better than that, you can CHANGE the expiration date on the
subkey that has no expiration date to anything like. You can extend
the date out further or cut it short. But, this will effect only your
key, and not the copies of your key that every
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Even better than that, you can CHANGE the expiration date on the
subkey that has no expiration date to anything you like. You can extend
the date out further or cut it short. But, this will effect only your
key, and not the copies of your key that ev
So I've been "advertising" keys.gnupg.net as the place to get my key
for a while now, but the round-robin DNS is kind of bugging me. I
understand the purpose of it, but it's kind of a crap shoot: not
infrequently, the address maps to a server that's down or buggy. I'd
rather have one dedicated addr
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