On 170119-11:13-0500, Jean-David Beyer wrote:
> On 01/19/2017 04:06 AM, Stephan Beck wrote:
> > 15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
> > for computer historians.
> >
>
> I agree. 20 years from now, we will all be using telepathy, and the
> telephone and Internet
Stephan,
On Thu, Jan 19, 2017 at 8:06 PM, Stephan Beck wrote:
> 15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
> for computer historians.
I doubt this as PGP was published ~25 years ago (on 5 June 1991) and
has outlasted the modern operating system support to hardware
man
Hello,
Elizabeth Ferdman wrote:
> I'm interning for the PGP Clean Room and am trying to get an OpenPGP
> Card reader. Kernelconcepts is offering a SPR332 which is the successor
> to the 532. According to this page, though,
>
> https://wiki.gnupg.org/CardReader/PinpadInput
I wrote this page, when
Hello,
I'm interning for the PGP Clean Room and am trying to get an OpenPGP
Card reader. Kernelconcepts is offering a SPR332 which is the successor
to the 532. According to this page, though,
https://wiki.gnupg.org/CardReader/PinpadInput
the 532 seems to be recommended but the 332 is not. I'm wo
On 01/19/2017 04:06 AM, Stephan Beck wrote:
> 15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
> for computer historians.
>
I agree. 20 years from now, we will all be using telepathy, and the
telephone and Internet will be redundant. Without electromagnetic
communication, an
> 15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
> for computer historians.
Maybe. So what? 15-20 years from now many of us will have expired and
only be of interest to our families.
Everything dies. That doesn't make things less valuable.
_
Nice to have a clairvoyant and soothsayer in this mailing list. Would
you dare to make a similar statement on the fate of windows or Linux?
:)
Bernhard
Am 19.01.2017 um 10:06 schrieb Stephan Beck:
> 15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
> for computer historians
15-20 years from now, OpenPGP will have expired and be a case of study
for computer historians.
Christian Heinrich:
> https://www.foo.be/2016/12/OpenPGP-really-works outlines a number of
> counter-arguments in support of GnuPG over OTR chat app and other
> alternatives.
>
___