Alan Bram via Gnupg-users wrote:
> I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
> invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
> 2.2.23) it started injecting a warning about "insecure passphrase" and
> suggesting that I ought to include a d
On 2020-09-17 at 22:57 +0200, Martin wrote:
> Which keyserver do you recommend these days?
For what purpose?
For receiving updates to previously known keys, of people who care
enough about their keys to distribute their keys across multiple
keyservers instead of just going "I pushed it to the key
Martin wrote:
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>
> Hi list
>
> Which keyserver do you recommend these days?
>
> I have hkps://keys.openpgp.org in gpg.conf - but it seems that there
> are missing a lot of public keys on this server.
Hi,
good question ... I like https://keys
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Hi list
Which keyserver do you recommend these days?
I have hkps://keys.openpgp.org in gpg.conf - but it seems that there
are missing a lot of public keys on this server.
- --
Best regards,
Martin
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On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 10:52 AM Alan Bram wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 8:56 AM Phil Pennock
> wrote:
>
>>
>> Set min-passphrase-nonalpha in ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf -- the default is
>> 1, but I think that you can set it to 0.
>>
>
> I tried that, but it doesn't seem to have any effect.
>
D
On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 8:56 AM Phil Pennock
wrote:
>
> Set min-passphrase-nonalpha in ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf -- the default is
> 1, but I think that you can set it to 0.
>
I tried that, but it doesn't seem to have any effect. Then, as an
experiment, I tried setting it to 2, and observed that i
On Wed, 16 Sep 2020 15:03, Alan Bram said:
> I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
> invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
> 2.2.23) it started injecting a warning about "insecure passphrase" and
> suggesting that I ought to inc
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Hello Ryan,
Thursday, September 17, 2020, 4:42:24 PM, you wrote:
> -Ryan McGinnis
> http://www.bigstormpicture.com
> PGP Fingerprint: 5C73 8727 EE58 786A 777C 4F1D B5AA 3FA3 486E D7AD
BTW your public key is not on keys.openpgp.org
- --
Best regar
On 2020-09-16 at 15:03 -0700, Alan Bram via Gnupg-users wrote:
> I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
> invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
> 2.2.23) it started injecting a warning about "insecure passphrase" and
> suggesting
Stop. Unsubscribe
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Thu, Sep 17, 2020 at 10:40 AM, Stefan Claas wrote: Alan
Bram via Gnupg-users wrote:
> I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
> invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
Wonder if someone saw this email and uploaded it -- it shows up when I search!
:)
Best,
-Ryan McGinnis
http://www.bigstormpicture.com
PGP Fingerprint: 5C73 8727 EE58 786A 777C 4F1D B5AA 3FA3 486E D7AD
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, September 17, 2020 10:25 AM, Martin wrote:
>
Alan Bram via Gnupg-users wrote:
> I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
> invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
> 2.2.23) it started injecting a warning about "insecure passphrase" and
> suggesting that I ought to include a d
(BTW -- not to be pedantic, but if by "a few" words you mean "three", then you
don't have a good passphrase -- six words is kinda minimum with diceware to get
a decent amount of entropy)
-Ryan McGinnis
http://www.bigstormpicture.com
PGP Fingerprint: 5C73 8727 EE58 786A 777C 4F1D B5AA 3FA3 486E D
I have been using gnupg for a few years now, with no change in the way I
invoke it. Recently (I guess my package manager updated to a new version:
2.2.23) it started injecting a warning about "insecure passphrase" and
suggesting that I ought to include a digit or special character.
I don't want to
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