#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include
#endif
#include
#include
#include
#include
Hello,
I have this code. And when I see output owner_trust = 4, but in gpg from
system I get 0. Do I need to somehow save this changes??
#include "t-support.h"
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
gpgme_ctx_t ctx;
gp
Hi!
Using an OpenPGP Card version 2 and importing a RSA 2048 bit key does
not work for me. I followed the description at
http://www.gnupg.org/howtos/card-howto/en/ch05.html#id2523191
moo:~ tk$ gpg2 --edit-key F1AE8111
gpg (GnuPG/MacGPG2) 2.0.12; Copyright (C) 2009 Free Software Foundation,
Inc.
Th
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
January 12th 2010 in gnupg-users@gnupg.org thread "Web of Trust itself
is the problem"
Actually I was quoting Robert Holtzman, not Robert J. Hansen, sorry
for not including the full name.
I have no time now to read those texts because my holidays e
Hello Werner,
>That probably means that your card does not follow the DIN V 66291-1
>(aka DINSIG) as implemented by scdaemon.
In fact, the customer support wrote me that mail:
"We are not sure why this tool is recognizing the card as a DINSIG card, but
we are quite sure the card is not a DINSIG
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mark H. Wood wrote:
|
| Still, it's another technology-intractable problem. If people cared,
| they would train themselves to look for trouble indicators, like
| scanning the dashboard from time to time for problems with speed,
| fuel, temperature, e
On Sun, Jan 10, 2010 at 11:37:12PM -0500, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> A few years ago a fellow grad student of mine, Peter Likarish, developed
> a really cool anti-phishing technology.
[but test subjects didn't react to the warning]
> Peter's hypothesis was that Flash ads are to blame. Users have
While the ontopicness of my comment is a bit questionable
I don't think I've gotten an encrypted email in the last 12 months,
but I still use gpg every day.
All Debian and (I imagine, or at least hope) Debian derivatives such
as Ubuntu incorporate digital signing of software.
I think signing
On Mon, 11 Jan 2010 13:06:03 -0500, lists.gnupg-us...@mephisto.fastmail.net
wrote:
> Forgive me, but how is a MitM attack possible against a symmetric cypher
> using a shared, secret key?
For example by swapping messages. Two messages are sent on two
out-of-band events one which says Yes and th