Hi Bernhard,
thanks for that page. I'm not using Thunderbird but I know many people
who do. In particular the option to turn off the annoying dots is very
useful.
I'm going to spread the link at least in our association and between
friends and colleagues. Did you toot the link through Mastodon as
On Mon, 18 Sep 2017 12:13:20 -0400
Lee wrote:
> Try it without the port number
> $ gpg --keyserver hkp://pgp.mit.edu --search-keys
> torbrow...@torproject.org gpg: searching for
> "torbrow...@torproject.org" from hkp server pgp.mit.edu (1) Tor
> Browser Developers (unknown) 4096 bit RSA
> ke
On Mon, 13 Oct 2014 18:33:10 +0200
Peter Lebbing wrote:
> On 13/10/14 18:17, Dr. Peter Voigt wrote:
> > I suppose the revocation certificate being a kind of replacement of
> > my public key. As it is bound to the fingerprint of a key pair it
> > can mark the key pair
On Mon, 13 Oct 2014 00:35:20 +0200
Hauke Laging wrote:
> Am So 12.10.2014, 23:35:16 schrieb Dr. Peter Voigt:
> > Can I still use my existing revocation certificate with my key pair
>
> Yes.
>
>
Thanks to all confirming my assumption.
> > I am supposing the revocat
Recently I have added a new identity to my GPG key pair. Can I still
use my existing revocation certificate with my key pair or do I have to
renew it because of the added identity?
I am supposing the revocation certificate just refers to my main
key ID regardless of the identities belonging to the