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Hi
On Wednesday 29 August 2012 at 8:50:40 AM, in
, Stan Tobias
wrote:
> What I should have added here, is that it's a symmetric
> relation, and people normally don't like to exclude
> others, as well. Avoiding others is not a trait of
> _usual_
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Hi
On Wednesday 29 August 2012 at 5:00:22 AM, in
, Landon Hurley wrote:
> In that case, perception of threat and more importantly
> loss of tangible goods keeps PIN secure.
Having perceived others as dishonest people who would steal your money
(w
Well, PKI is used by at least one country on a national level , it works
pretty well,
http://bankid.com , it is issued for free by all major banks, and there
are other PKI solutions issued by a few other companies which have
national adoption. You pay a bit extra with your mobile carrier if you
w
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El 28-08-2012 18:27, Stan Tobias escribió:
...
>> What would happen if you start reading your daughter's diary
>> everyday, but never let anybody catch you reading it? And you
>> are
...
> I would be violating her privacy.
Right, that was my poi
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On 08/29/2012 10:18 AM, Mark H. Wood wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 12:00:22AM -0400, Landon Hurley wrote:
> [snip]
>> The barrier is solely cultural, not technical. Enigmail,
>> Thunderbird and gpg4win are trivial to set up. The first time I
>> d
Hello,
I'm the maintainer of a PHP package that integrates with GnuPG
(https://github.com/gauthierm/Crypt_GPG)
The package is used on a website to allow decrypting stored messages.
This is accomplished using the --status-fd and --command-fd options of
GnuPG, allowing the passing of passphras
On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 12:00:22AM -0400, Landon Hurley wrote:
[snip]
> The barrier is solely cultural, not technical. Enigmail, Thunderbird and
> gpg4win are trivial to set up. The first time I did it, it was on the
> phone, talking someone through it. So we either need to invent some sort
> of ma
On 29/08/12 13:53, Richi Lists wrote:
> I can't get it to work wether I try it on the primary or the sub key and
> whether I use gpg or gpg2.
> [...]
>
> $ gpg2 -v --edit-key E8401492!
> [...]
>
> gpg: using subkey E8401492 instead of primary key 0AE275A9
> Secret key is available.
Why are you f
I can't get it to work wether I try it on the primary or the sub key and
whether I use gpg or gpg2.
Rgds
Richard
$ gpg2 -v --edit-key E8401492!
gpg (GnuPG) 2.0.17; Copyright (C) 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARR
On 29/08/12 11:49, antispa...@sent.at wrote:
> I felt offended by my own email: What is stopping PKI from growing. So I come
> with a question: some security apps like TrueCrypt and KeePass allow the user
> to
> use a keyfile instead of a password.
Note that your changing access to the key from w
I felt offended by my own email: What is stopping PKI from growing. So
I come with a question: some security apps like TrueCrypt and KeePass
allow the user to use a keyfile instead of a password.
Now, given a file filled with values 0 to 255 as random as they
possibly can get, a keyfile is the ide
Hello List!
I'm (for some of you) your worst nightmare. Somebody who does not master
the fine arts of cryptography, yet has an oppinion about cryptography. I
might say I enjoy reading the thread on PKI, but I wasn't able to read
it all.
Please understand this is not a flame against Landon, but ra
"Stan Tobias" wrote:
> but generally people
> don't like to be excluded, people want everyone to be open.
What I should have added here, is that it's a symmetric relation, and
people normally don't like to exclude others, as well. Avoiding others
is not a trait of _usual_ _social_ behaviour, a
On Tue, 28 Aug 2012 21:48, ricu...@gmail.com said:
F> Hi Werner,
>
> the ! exclamation mark did the trick!
> I tried specifying the subkey I wanted before, but only the exclamation
> mark makes it work.
> With the exclamation mark, also signing in evolution works again.
> Is this documented somew
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