Mike Acker wrote:
> Is PGP/ENIGMAIL compatible with folks using Outlook or Microsoft Mail
> with PGP Desktop?
>
> I've tried searching for this but no luck,-- :-(
Enigmail is an extension for Thunderbird and Mozilla mail. It uses GnuPG for its
cryptographic processing. It conforms to RFC2 4880 an
On 3/16/2011 7:01 PM, Mike Acker wrote:
> Is PGP/ENIGMAIL compatible with folks using Outlook or Microsoft
> Mail with PGP Desktop?
PGP is a registered trademark of the PGP Corporation. It's a great
product, but Enigmail doesn't use it. Enigmail uses GnuPG, which is a
compatible implementation o
Is PGP/ENIGMAIL compatible with folks using Outlook or Microsoft Mail
with PGP Desktop?
I've tried searching for this but no luck,-- :-(
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Hello,
currently I have some trouble to get my Cyberjack running with PCSC. So I
wonder, can GnuPG (2.0.16) also work with CTAPI drivers?
Thanx
Malte
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Johan Wevers johanw at vulcan.xs4all.nl wrote on
Wed Mar 16 09:16:56 CET 2011 :
>Current OSes pose already a problem. PGP 2 did not provide nagtive
binaries for win32 so I compiled them myself
I've had a problem running Disastry's PGP 2.6.3 multi6 on 64 bit
windows systems, because the DOS comm
On Mar 16, 2011, at 10:05 AM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 9:41 AM, wrote:
>> David Shaw dshaw at jabberwocky.com wrote on
>> Wed Mar 16 00:42:48 CET 2011 :
>>
>>
>>> GnuPG does the MDC by default whenever all the keys can handle it
>>
>> What kind of key can't handle it in
On Mar 16, 2011, at 9:41 AM, ved...@nym.hush.com wrote:
> David Shaw dshaw at jabberwocky.com wrote on
> Wed Mar 16 00:42:48 CET 2011 :
>
>
>> GnuPG does the MDC by default whenever all the keys can handle it
>
> What kind of key can't handle it in gnupg?
None. It's not a key type, but a fea
On 3/16/2011 10:05 AM, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> 2 key or 3 key? 2TDEA only provides about 80 bits of security, and is
> usually not recommend for use.
The OpenPGP spec requires three-key 3DES, and GnuPG conforms to the spec.
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On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 9:41 AM, wrote:
> David Shaw dshaw at jabberwocky.com wrote on
> Wed Mar 16 00:42:48 CET 2011 :
>
>
>>GnuPG does the MDC by default whenever all the keys can handle it
>
> What kind of key can't handle it in gnupg?
>
> I sent messages to all key types, including v3 keys, u
David Shaw dshaw at jabberwocky.com wrote on
Wed Mar 16 00:42:48 CET 2011 :
>GnuPG does the MDC by default whenever all the keys can handle it
What kind of key can't handle it in gnupg?
I sent messages to all key types, including v3 keys, using the
forced MDC,
(my preferred cipher is 3DES, n
Op 16-3-2011 13:53, Mark H. Wood schreef:
>> Only if IDEA gets broken (or the pgp 2.x implementation of it turns out
>> flawed) or, very unlikely, 128 bit can be brute-forced in the future.
> On that day it would be well to already know what to do about it and
> already have the tools in hand. I
On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 09:15:45AM +0100, Johan Wevers wrote:
> Op 15-3-2011 21:32, Ben McGinnes schreef:
>
> > That's probably a worthwhile discussion to have. Even if RFC1991
> > support is maintained, there's still value in migrating encrypted data
> > to more robust algorithms.
>
> Only if I
On 16/03/11 8:50 PM, Werner Koch wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Mar 2011 06:33, b...@adversary.org said:
>
>> Okay, so that would cover 3DES too? Surely there can't be many
>
> No. DES and thus 3DES have a blocksize of 64 bit. The blocksize is not
> related to the keysize.
Ah, right, got it. Thanks.
On Wed, 16 Mar 2011 06:33, b...@adversary.org said:
> Okay, so that would cover 3DES too? Surely there can't be many
No. DES and thus 3DES have a blocksize of 64 bit. The blocksize is not
related to the keysize.
Shalom-Salam,
Werner
--
Die Gedanken sind frei. Ausnahmen regelt ein Bund
Op 15-3-2011 21:57, Ingo Klöcker schreef:
> Why migrate away? Even if GnuPG 3 stops supporting RFC1991 there will
> always be GnuPG 1 and GnuPG 2 around to decrypt ancient data and verify
> signatures made decades ago.
If that is the case, you could also say we still have pgp 2.x arround
includ
Op 15-3-2011 21:32, Ben McGinnes schreef:
> That's probably a worthwhile discussion to have. Even if RFC1991
> support is maintained, there's still value in migrating encrypted data
> to more robust algorithms.
Only if IDEA gets broken (or the pgp 2.x implementation of it turns out
flawed) or, v
Op 15-3-2011 21:16, Robert J. Hansen schreef:
> This may not be so much an argument for IDEA's inclusion as it might be
> an argument for data migration.
How do I re-sign a message with someone else's private key? And for that
matter, how do I do that convenient with a mailbox with many encrypted
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