Hello,
On 3.2.2018 7:25, FuzzyDrawrings via Gnupg-users wrote:
|m: 4f70656e504750040016080006050255f95f9504ff000c
|
|Using the SHA2-256 hash algorithm yields the digest:
|
|d: f6220a3f757814f4c2176ffbb68b00249cd4ccdc059c4b34ad871f30b1740280
I can obtain m, no problem. But fail t
On 8.11.2013 1:11, Johannes Zarl wrote:
> How is GnuPG affected by such a low-entropy system? Will operations just take
> a bit longer, or can this affect the quality/security of generated keys or
> signatures?
Key generation definitely needs good random data. But generating an RSA
signature is
Hello,
I'm having some troubles using both a PKCS #11 accessed card (national
electronic ID card) and an OpenPGP card in the same computer. I haven't
really looked deep into this yet, but it looks like the smart card
reader is claimed by the driver that is first started (scdaemon or the
natio
On 27.10.2013 2:09, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> The name of the game is economics. How much is the secret worth? If
> it's worth $50,000 of computer equipment and cryptanalysis, then it's
> also worth a $50,000 bribe, a $50,000 payment to a professional thief to
> break in and plant keyloggers, $50
Hello,
On 23.10.2013 0:37, Martin Wolters wrote:
I am using gpg4win 2.2.1, which according to the change log supports
the SPR332 PIN-pad, but pinentry requests the PIN from the keyboard.
Is there anything I need to configure to enforce the entry from the
card reader?
I'm having the exact same