Hello,
You'll probably want to learn a bit about the shell and the directory structure
of unix-ish based systems before going too far into gpg. (if you're using
linux, the shell is most likely called bash)
What you're attempting to do is execute a directory as if it were a command,
what you ma
On April 6, 2017 2:12:08 AM EDT, Tay Too wrote:
>Hello everybody, very new to linux, and pretty unfamiliar with gnupg
>still,
>only used a few times. Yesterday i was able to open an actual window of
>Gnupg through my terminal with a command similar to ~/.gnupgnow
>when i
>enter this it tells m
Hi Tay Too,
Yes, .gnupg is a directory where gpg finds/puts its files. The command you want
is either:
gpg
or
gpg2
You can learn a bit more about it via an online tutorial, but also via the man
page (the manual page on your computer) by typing:
man gpg
or possibly man gnupg (i'm not at consol
Hi there,is there any way to display a gpg signature as a string of zeros and
ones?Thanking in advance,jbs
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Hello everybody, very new to linux, and pretty unfamiliar with gnupg still,
only used a few times. Yesterday i was able to open an actual window of
Gnupg through my terminal with a command similar to ~/.gnupgnow when i
enter this it tells me this is a directory and wont do anything with it,
any
Hi, I'm using GnuPG 2.1.19 on a Mac with a smartcard (a YubiKey NEO)
holding my regularly-used subkeys - some of my keys are actually in my
secret keyring, but others are only stubs. When I run gpg --card-status,
each secret key is correctly marked with # when it's unavailable or >
when it's stored
Dear Sir or Madam,
a member of this group told me to post the following question and i hope
it is in the right place.
I'm working for a german quality assurance company in healthcare.
We are working on an security improvement for our hashcode generator,
which produces unique identifiers for p