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On 06/16/2015 06:28 PM, James Moe wrote:
> Hello, My understanding of en-/decryption is that there is no
> indication of progress toward finding a successful key match of a
> given encryption. Only when the key is exactly correct will the
> encrypte
> Is this a correct interpretation?
Pretty close.
> My understanding of en-/decryption is that there is no indication of
> progress toward finding a successful key match of a given
> encryption.
Not quite. If you're doing a brute-force attack it's easy to figure out
what fraction of the possib
Very confused by this. Every time I insert my yubikey into a system I must
do 'gpg --card-status' to make gpg-agent aware it exists again.
Using: gpg/gpg-agent 2.1.4
Expected Results:
1. Insert yubikey
2. Issue version command to gpg agent
3. Version is reported
4. Remove and re-insert key
5. Is
Hello,
My understanding of en-/decryption is that there is no indication of
progress toward finding a successful key match of a given encryption.
Only when the key is exactly correct will the encrypted data be revealed.
I have seen numerous TV and movie stories where someone is
frantically atte
On 06/16/2015 03:50 PM, A.T. Leibson wrote:
What aspects are the most challenging for new users to understand?
I would say: all the stuff related to the concepts of "key validity" and
"owner trust".
Particularly, the fact that the validity of a given key is automatically
determined by looki
thx for your answer.
What kind of PGP smartcard are you using?
15. Jun 2015 19:54 by m...@confidantmail.org:
> You can use the gpg-agent for ssh auth.
> In gpg-agent.conf you put:
> enable-putty-support
>
> Than you can run the agent like this:
> "c:\Program Files (x86)\GNU\GnuPG.v2\bin\gpg-age
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Hi
On Tuesday 16 June 2015 at 4:22:01 PM, in
, Steve
Butler wrote:
> I generated a set of documents about a decade ago that
> someone asked permission to post on the web. Just did
> a search and could not find. I'll try to dig through
> my thum
Biggest pitfall -- new users sending me both their public and private keys.
Most have a mental block on how these are used.
I generated a set of documents about a decade ago that someone asked permission
to post on the web. Just did a search and could not find. I'll try to dig
through my thum
Hi everyone,
What has your experience been teaching inexperienced users how to use
GnuPG properly? What are common pitfalls on the part of the instructor?
What aspects are the most challenging for new users to understand?
Lastly, what's your favorite noob-friendly guide, and why?
Thanks,
Adamh
On Thu, 11 Jun 2015 18:11, j...@fastmail.com said:
>> * Support for the forthcoming version 3 OpenPGP smartcard.
>>
>
> Is there a contact for this, or a draft of the standard available?
You find the specs at the bottom of the page
http://g10code.com/p-card.html
--
Die Gedanken sind frei.
On Mon, 15 Jun 2015 07:01, cl...@jhcloos.com said:
> My gpg.conf still has 'keyserver hkp://127.0.0.1', and I've tried adding
> that also to dirmngr.conf, but it always fails.
Right, this is a regression. The reason is that now the dirmngr daemon
takes care of keyservers and it handles keyserver
Daniel Kahn Gillmor writes:
> Hi Simon--
>
> Thanks for the interesting use case.
>
> On Tue 2015-06-09 09:21:08 -0400, Simon Josefsson wrote:
>> My current idea is to generate a secur...@example.com master PGP key and
>> keep that offline, and to generate one decryption sub-key, and load that
>>
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