try
--yes
or
--batch
or both.
Felipe
On Wed, Apr 20, 2011 at 11:21, Yard, John wrote:
> I am doing scriptewd/batch gpg encryption , and I am
> getting the following repeated prompts:
>
> It is NOT certain that the key belongs to the person named
> in the user ID. If you *really* know what
> Have you ever thought about GPG4WIN?
Looks a bit 'heavy' (fancy GUI and a bunch of programs I know that I
will not be using) but I'll give it a try.
Felipe
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I've currently begun getting everyone in the office using GnuPG on
windows. We're using WinPT as the front end. However there are several
deficiencies with this program that we have encountered. Further, it
is no longer being developed (last version 1.4.3 release sept 2009).
Are there any other win
Hi
I am trying to play around with keys Alice and Bob for showing to my
employer on how to improve security. "Alice" is the employer, and
"bob" the employee.
I created a key for each, on separate machines. Alice runs RedHat 4,
and gpg v1.2.6. Bob runs Cygwin and GnuPG v.1.4.11.
Alice's key was g
On Mon, 18 May 2009 11:05:37 Farha Patnaikk wrote:
> C:\Temp>gpg --homedir "C:\temp" --output 01.txt --decrypt
testfile.dat.pgp
> gpg: mpi too large for this implementation (20744 bits)
>
> C:\Temp>gpg --homedir "C:\temp" --output 01.txt --openpgp --decrypt
> testfile.dat
> .pgp
> gpg: mpi too lar
On Sat, 16 May 2009 20:13:55 Ingo Klöcker wrote:
> On Saturday 16 May 2009, webmas...@felipe1982.com wrote:
> > I will do my best to describe as succinctly and clearly as possible.
> > To begin, I use openSUSE, openoffice for documents, and
[usually]
> > kmail for email. I created a document in OO
On Sat, 16 May 2009 15:10:06 david wrote:
> You encrypt the document first - before sending. So type oo
document
> then encrypt it - save it it to disk then open email and add it as an
> attachment - this will preserve formatting you do not then have to
> encrypt again - you could digitally sign i
On Wed, 13 May 2009 08:48:55 Jake Bellew wrote:
> Possibly, while learning to use gpg I created two keys that I have
> ultimate trust with but I'm not sure. How can I remove them from my
> trustdb since I don't really know how they ended up there?
When I started out with gpg, I created and destroye
On Wed, 6 May 2009 20:11:27 Bob Yang wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I hit error when using the below script.
>
> gpg -e "key" "file" < yes
> EOF
>
> Error:
> It is NOT certain that the key belongs to the person named
> in the user ID. If you *really* know what you are doing,
> you may answer the next questi
- Original Message -
From: "felipe alvarez"
To: "David SMITH"
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 8:02 PM
Subject: Re: problems with http://www.gnupg.org
- Original Message -
From: "David SMITH"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, May 06, 2009 6:17 AM
S
My web host has gnupg 1.2.6 on their machines. I often SSH into it when
I am not at home on my gnulinux box. Anything I should be concerned
about when using this version? the two key pairs I made (DSS signing,
ELG encryption) were made on gnupg 2.0.9, and transfered (and
imported) to this host
ed to it." bad
idea, no TB for me thanks)
- Original Message -
From: "Faramir"
To: "Felipe Alvarez"
Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2009 10:47 AM
Subject: Re: Subkeys...
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Felipe Alvarez escribió:
Sorry about that. My
On Thu, 30 Apr 2009 02:45:45 Faramir wrote:
> By the way, I saw your message is signed, but I couldn't locate a
copy
> of your public key...
Sorry about that. My comment below should contain the URL for the
key. I
still new to this, and weary about uploading my public key on
keyservers.
Last
On Wed, 29 Apr 2009 14:09:52 Faramir wrote:
> I think he is
> implementing the tutorial about how to store the main keys at a safe
> place, and keep the subkeys for daily usage.
Which TUT is that?
Felipe
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
___
On Sat, 25 Apr 2009 04:28:58 bkumfer wrote:
> Thank you again. Is there a difference between encrypting a file vs.
> encrypting an email?
Not really. It just bits n bytes. Anything gpg takes in as input (files,
plaintext, whatever) it just happily signs and/or encrypts. If you are
emailing the o
> It's historical. Back in the late 1990s, the PGP developers were
> offered a free patent license if they called it Diffie-Hellman. Now
> that the patent has expired, though, it's a little hard to change
> their product without confusing a bunch of customers who would see
> their "Diffie-Hellman
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wed, 22 Apr 2009 14:57:00 david wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> installing gnupg enigma on pro 2000 I have to import files from this
> linux laptop - are file conventions the same?
>
> (a) put linux hard drive on usb and scan for keys public and private
via
>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 20:02:29 Jan Banan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am completely new to encryption as well as Unix-server programs
etc. I am
> trying to set up a form on a webpage that should be encrypted when
the data
> is sent to me. I have found a freeware
On Thu, Mar 26, 2009 at 8:17 PM, Sven Radde wrote:
> Hi!
>
> Felipe Alvarez schrieb:
>> Someone today shook my understanding of asymmetric ciphers.
>>
>> _Bob performs symmetric encryption on message with_
>> _key "K" (generated randomly). He then encr
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Someone today shook my understanding of asymmetric ciphers.
_Bob performs symmetric encryption on message with_
_key "K" (generated randomly). He then encrypts "K" _
_with Alice's public key, and sends both the symetrically _
_encrypted message and as
On Fri, Mar 6, 2009 at 12:10 AM, David Shaw wrote:
>> What do the letters to the right of the words "usage" mean? (S,C,A,E) I
>> can only guess |S|ign, |E|ncrypt,
>
> (S)ign: sign some data (like a file)
> (C)ertify: sign a key (this is called certification)
> (A)uthenticate: authenticate you
Me again. Sorry to sound newbish. I've googled, but I haven't found anything
quite as detailed enough for me to grasp the 'whole forest' (so to speak).
My question is regarding 'subkeys.' Let me know if I am getting the
wording/terminology incorrect.
I understand that when I 'gen-key' I create a '
Hi all. I'm new here, so please be gentle =). I've read the information
about getting gpg-agent to work. I don't use X, but I login remotely with
ssh (publickey authentication). My gpg-agent is acting funny. after ssh
login, I get this error
--
fel...@suse-amd:~> gpg-agent
gpg-agent[32408]: can't c
opensuse 11.0 and 11.1
gpg2 -r -be
Creates a detached signature file, but does not encrypt the . I could
do it in two steps (gpg2 -e ; gpg2 -b ) but can it be
done in one?
Felipe
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