Is it advisable to set options on a smart card such as Name of
cardholder, Sex, URL of public key, and Language prefs? It just seems
like information like that is extraneous. Thoughts?
Thanks,
Will
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On 4/9/17 3:16 PM, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
>> I know of PGP-based WoT used in security-aware networks of sysadmins,
>> CERTs etc. I would have guessed that a significant part of the
>> audience of this list are professional/experienced/involved admins or
>> developers. But let me know why the majo
On 4/4/17 5:22 AM, Mauricio Tavares wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 3, 2017 at 10:27 PM, Robert J. Hansen
> wrote:
>>> What do you mean by "will be better served by avoiding them"? What's the
>>> reservation?
>> Imagine we're in a restaurant and you ask me, "Should I order the
>> pizza?" Well, beats heck
Hi Jan,
On 4/4/17 1:46 AM, Jan Koppe wrote:
> Hello Will,
>
> somewhat off-topic, but..
>
> On 04.04.2017 01:18, Will Senn wrote:
>
>> If this has been addressed recently, my apologies, I couldn't find a
>> search interface for gnupg-users...
> You can use a
On 4/3/17 11:48 PM, Doug Barton wrote:
> On 04/03/2017 08:33 PM, Will Senn wrote:
>> I didn't ask if I should get one. I asked if there were resources to
>> help a newb make decisions regarding them. While I sense a certain
>> disdain in your response, I'll make
On 4/3/17 9:27 PM, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
>> What do you mean by "will be better served by avoiding them"? What's the
>> reservation?
> Imagine we're in a restaurant and you ask me, "Should I order the
> pizza?" Well, beats heck out of me. I don't know you from Adam, I
> don't know your persona
On 4/3/17 8:37 PM, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
>> Are smartcards out of vogue? If not, can you suggest resources that will
>> help a newb make decisions regarding them?
> Smartcards are not out of vogue for people who need them. Those who
> don't will be better served by avoiding them. Do you have a
In my PGP research, I have been looking for a smart card that supports
openpgp. I found the OpenPGP Card Version 2.1 over at kernelconcepts,
but I'm wondering if they are still operational. I also saw something
called a Yubi Key on Amazon. I found this howto that is pretty dated:
https://www.gnupg.
On 4/3/17 1:25 AM, Doug Barton wrote:
>
> > but
> > I'm not having much luck signing with subkeys, so I'm not convinced this
> > is worth the headache and increased complexity of key management.
>
> It's not really that hard to do, what kind of problems are you having?
> The instructions at https:
On 4/2/17 2:00 PM, Neal H. Walfield wrote:
> At Sun, 2 Apr 2017 11:20:16 -0700,
> Doug Barton wrote:
>> On 04/01/2017 07:10 AM, Will Senn wrote:
>>> 3. I've read
>>> https://superuser.com/questions/466396/how-to-manage-gpg-keys-across-multiple-systems
>&g
ses, but unless we know why you want to use it, it's nearly
> impossible to give you good advice.
>
> More below.
>
> On 04/01/2017 07:10 AM, Will Senn wrote:
>
>> 3. I've read
>> https://superuser.com/questions/466396/how-to-manage-gpg-keys-across-multiple-system
Robert,
On 4/1/17 3:08 PM, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
>> Do I just move on and try not to do that in the future, or is there any
>> hope for cleaning up?
> Move on. It's okay, everybody makes this mistake in the beginning. :)
I thought this might be the case. On the one hand, bummer, on the other,
On 4/1/17 11:22 AM, Francesco Ariis wrote:
> Hello Will, I'll answer 1. 2. and 4. (3. is beyond my knowledge):
>
> On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 09:10:55AM -0500, Will Senn wrote:
>> 1. It seems that the keyservers never forget. In creating keypairs while
>> trying to figur
sec# rsa4096 2017-03-11 [SC]
EA940B8B4625EC287C3BF93FFE9E46E0FBAAB459
uid [ultimate] Will Senn
ssb rsa4096 2017-03-30 [E]
ssb rsa2048 2017-03-30 [S] [expires: 2019-03-30]
ssb rsa2048 2017-03-30 [E] [expires: 2019-03-30]
The second ssb is a signing key [S], so what's up with that, or in other
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