On 01/09/17 08:31, Andrew Gallagher wrote:
> On 31/08/17 03:35, Mario Castelán Castro wrote:
>> Writer and recipient have a Diffie-Hellman key over the same group and
>> know each other's public key.
>>
>> The writer computers the shared secret per the DH algorithm
>
> This is the real trick thoug
On Thu, 03 Aug 2017 07:00:04 +0900, NIIBE Yutaka wrote:
> If someone will make transaction to that address for some amount, I
> would resume the development again. :-)
As a little proof of concept i converted my sub signing key to
a private Bitcoin WIF key and send you some Satoshi. :-)
Here you
> I thought you could also tell how many keys it was encrypted to, from
> the output of gpg --list-packets.
Nope. You can tell how many subkeys it was encrypted for, but not how
many distinct certificates those represent. If one recipient has 10
subkeys and you encrypt to all 10, there will be 1
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
On Tuesday 29 August 2017 at 2:24:18 PM, in
, Shawn K.
Quinn wrote:-
> No, that's the whole point of throw-keyids. All
> you're supposed to be
> able to tell when using that option, is that none of
> your keys will
> decrypt the message, so it's