Hi
On Thursday 19 November 2020 at 9:08:25 PM, in
, dalz via Gnupg-users wrote:-
> I could configure gpg-agent to not cache the
> key and ask for the
> passphrase each time, but that is very annoying with
> a long passphrase
If you use a password manager, the length of your passphrase doesn't
The motivation is that I'd like to know when something wants to decrypt
a file. I could configure gpg-agent to not cache the key and ask for the
passphrase each time, but that is very annoying with a long passphrase,
so I was wondering if there was any other way to accomplish that.
What I'm thinkin
Hi Neal,
thanks a lot for the detailed explanation!
Best regards
Stefan
On Thu, Nov 19, 2020 at 7:52 AM Neal H. Walfield wrote:
>
> Hi Stefan,
>
> A chosen-prefix collision attack works as follows: an attacker chooses
> two message prefixes, and then uses near collisions blocks (in the
> SHA-1