In the future, instead of GPG or OpenSSL I would suggest an encrypted
filesystem such as an encrypted folder or partition or Truecrypt volume.
The advantage of those is that a single bit error is likely to only
affect one file. If you archive the files before transferring them to
your encrypted
Peter S. May wrote:
> After this, the first part of the
> line is repeated, except it is as if it were filtered
> through the command:
>
> tr 'A-Za-z0-9+/=' '0-9A-Z+/=a-z'
>
> That is, for every "REGNADKCIN" that appears
> on the left side, there is
> a "H46D03A28D" on the right side.
Tha
Philipp Gühring wrote:
Does anyone know of software available to make an old PC into something
like a hardware security module.
>>> Yes, I developed exactly such software.
>> Great. What is it called? Is it available?
>
> It´s called CommModule. It isn´t publically available yet, but it
Roscoe wrote:
> I just tried OCR-A but with limited success. Will add in par2 and see
> how things go with that.
That should be interesting.
I'm now leaning even more towards hex (base16) rather than base64. There
would be less opportunity for confusion for the OCR. I was thinking it
would be t
James Cloos wrote:
> Use the OCRA font. I did that in the past scaled so that the key used
> up most of a single letter sized sheet of paper. I probably used mpage¹
> or enscript² to do the conversion to PostScript (it has been a while :).
> CTAN has metafont versions of OCRA and OCRB if you use
shirish wrote:
>> Please lemme know how to proceed further. We can also take this
>> off-list if you feel to be more appropriate. I don't know how the list
>> would look at this.
This is the gnupg-users mailing list and we are discussing the basics of
how to "use" gnupg so I think this is approp
shirish wrote:
> Also what do u guys think of Mr. Casey Jones, do u think he's right
> at the above.
Werner posted that the keys should be identical between the versions, so
I guess my suggestion shouldn't be necessary. Therefore I withdraw my
suggestion. It still might be wo
Roscoe wrote:
>Does anyone :
>
> Know of a system that can take binary data and output an image to be
> printed out, that is then capable of extracting that binary data from
> an imperfect scan of the image.
The wiki page on barcodes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barcode
has a list of 2d barcodes
Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> I apologize if I sound terse here, but this conversation has (IMO)
> jumped the shark.
>
>> But how can we be confident?
>
> Cf. Thompson, K. _Reflections on trusting trust_. Comm. ACM 27, 8
> (Aug. 1984), 761-763.
>
> A digital version of it is currently available
Werner Koch wrote:
> On Mon, 14 May 2007 16:15, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>
>> Why doesn't it make sense? The chip's security features make it fairly
>> secure. But having the keys encrypted on the card would make it highly
>> secure. As long as the passphrase hadn't been captured, like after bein
Zeljko Vrba wrote:
> there's NO WAY to prevent this attack. Not even
> separate PIN entry device helps,
The attack that I'm referring to here which the PIN pad is meant to
prevent, is only the unlimited use of the smart card. An attacker can
still make a signature or decrypt something, but only
Werner Koch wrote:
> On Mon, 14 May 2007 10:44, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
>> something's wrong. Can the OpenPGP Card be set to do one operation per
>> pin entry when used with a card reader that has a keypad? This seems
>
> Yes, use the command "forcesig" in the --card-edit menu to toggle this
> f
Sven Radde wrote:
> Casey Jones schrieb:
>> Does anyone know of software available to make an old PC into something
>> like a hardware security module.
>
> What about Knoppix?
> It supports GnuPG and you can easily have your keys on a (dedicated) USB
> drive whi
Robert J. Hansen wrote:
>> Does anyone know of software available to make an old PC into something
>> like a hardware security module.
>
> What particular type of HSM do you mean?
Basically I'm looking for something that does what the OpenPGP Card
does, but with a button to limit signatures and
Does anyone know of software available to make an old PC into something
like a hardware security module. OpenHSM.org looks like what I want, but
the site says they're still in the design phase, and the last update was
in 2004.
I can't stand the thought of storing my private key on my main compu
15 matches
Mail list logo