On 8/24/2020 at 8:36 AM, "Guille De La Torre via Gnupg-users"
wrote:
>
is it possible to create a key for symmetric encryption
>in such a way that the person who has my public key does not need
>to enter a password? to decrypt.
=
No. and Yes.8^)
It is not possible that the person
On 24-08-2020 8:08, Guille De La Torre via Gnupg-users wrote:
> Hello good evening, is it possible to create a key for symmetric
> encryption in such a way that the person who has my public key does not
> need to enter a password? to decrypt.
The receiver uses your public key only to encrypt and
Hello good evening, is it possible to create a key for symmetric encryption
in such a way that the person who has my public key does not need to enter
a password? to decrypt.
I appreciate your kind response.
regards
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Am Samstag 15 August 2020 01:15:28 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> > Do you prefer this?
> >
> > https://0x0.st/iYel.jpg
>
> Yes. :-)
Nice. What is the license on the artwork?
Bernhard
--
www.intevation.de/~bernhard +49 541 33 508 3-3
Intevation GmbH, Osnabrück, DE; Amtsgericht Osnabrück, HRB 1899
Am Dienstag 04 August 2020 18:17:56 schrieb Dmitry Alexandrov:
> it would be nice, if GPG were not interpreting locating an
> expired key as success, but continued with the next method instead:
This is related to
https://dev.gnupg.org/T5028
(gpg --locate-key should refetch via wkd, if configu