On February 25, 2019 5:13:32 AM AKST, Michael Holly
wrote:
> So I completely preface this question is not a valid use case for gpg.
> I know, I get it.
>
> I have a potential issue that I'm trying to diagnose. I'm trying to
> understand how gpg will react to the input file size changing during
On February 11, 2019 4:04:31 AM AKST, Alessandro Vesely wrote:
>Werner,
>
>I just saw version -07 today. The advanced method:
>
>WELLKNOWN :=
>https://openpgpkey.example.org/.well-known/example.org/openpgpkey
>
>doesn't seem to make much sense to me. I tried it with posteo.de, and
>got:
>
>ale@p
On February 4, 2019 8:07:33 AM AKST, Citizen Kepler
wrote:
>I would like to say that I need to have a signature on all of the
>emails that I send to authenticate me as the sender, but not encrypt
>them. Often these messages are going back into bug tracking systems or
>mailing lists, and manually
On February 3, 2019 7:48:28 AM AKST, "Robert J. Hansen"
wrote:
>> What i liked about PGPfone was that you could directly connect to
>your
>> communications partner, without any servers involved and it was super
>> easy to use. You simply put in the (current) IP Adress, connect and
>then
>> read s
On February 1, 2019 10:05:58 AM AKST, Stefan Claas wrote:
>On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 19:43:35 -0900, justina colmena wrote:
>
>> With regards to PGPfone etc., all you need to do is run Asterisk on a
>server somewhere, enable SIP with encryption.
>> If you or your conversation partner don't have a public
On January 30, 2019 1:47:41 PM AKST, Stefan Claas wrote:
>On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 12:46:26 -0800, Allen M. Juinio wrote:
>> > Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2019 20:44:07 +0100
>> > From: Stefan Claas
>
>> > On the other side i wish PGPfone would have been further developed.
>> > I found it, way back then, pretty
On January 19, 2019 9:56:00 AM AKST, "Ingo Klöcker" wrote:
>On Samstag, 19. Januar 2019 17:10:38 CET Stefan Claas wrote:
>> Method used with GnuPG:
>>
>> In gpg.conf i put: photo-viewer "cat > %K.%t"
>>
>> and then i used this one liner:
>>
>> for filename in ./*.pgp; do gpg --list-keys --list-
On January 8, 2019 11:23:40 AM AKST, dirk1980ac via Gnupg-users
wrote:
>Hello.
>
>Am Dienstag, den 08.01.2019, 20:16 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
>
>> Yes, agreed! However, as it currently is there is no need for bad
>> actors because people have plenty of image space in a key.
>
>Uh, I think you
On January 1, 2019 4:13:43 PM AKST, MFPA
<2017-r3sgs86x8e-lists-gro...@riseup.net> wrote:
>Hi
>
>
>On Monday 31 December 2018 at 9:06:39 PM, in
>, justina
>colmena via Gnupg-users wrote:-
>
>
>> Shouldn't an email message (for example) be encrypted
>
On December 31, 2018 5:38:10 AM AKST, Dirk Gottschalk via Gnupg-users
wrote:
>Hello Damien.
>
>Am Montag, den 31.12.2018, 12:45 + schrieb Damien Goutte-Gattat:
>> On Mon, Dec 31, 2018 at 07:17:21AM +0100, Dirk Gottschalk via Gnupg-
>> users wrote:
>> > Yes, that's correct. Anyways, I prefer u
This e-mail is signed with a key generated by OpenKeychain on a smartphone. I
am able to verify the signatures on other signed e-mails I get on this mailing
list, with the exception of the footer added by the mailing list software.
I was able to back up the key, import it into GnuPG 1.4.23 and s
On December 12, 2018 10:13:58 PM AKST, Werner Koch wrote:
>On Tue, 11 Dec 2018 19:27, art...@ulfeldt.com said:
>> using openkeychain with a yubikey nfc is totally solid, and
>convenient.
>> I've been using them for years. they also plug into the bottom of the
>> phones which some people prefer.
>
On December 12, 2018 2:00:18 PM AKST, Todd Zullinger wrote:
>
> the keyserver and photoviewer helpers
>
A permanent record and a mug shot for the cops and every thief, hooker, and
pickpocket on the block, respectively. And they all just help themselves to the
secret key.
Someone puts out a lit
On December 12, 2018 2:35:43 AM AKST, Stefan Claas
wrote:
>On Wed, 12 Dec 2018 10:15:33 +0100, Wiktor Kwapisiewicz via Gnupg-users
>wrote:
>> Hello all,
>>
>> I recently saw a message from one of Fedora's maintainers:
>>
>> > Coming soon to Fedora30 (rawhide), gnupg v1.4.x renamed to gnupg1.
>A
On December 9, 2018 11:17:34 AM AKST, Stefan Claas
wrote:
>On Sun, 9 Dec 2018 21:11:12 +0100, Juergen Bruckner wrote:
>> Am 09.12.18 um 18:24 schrieb Dirk Gottschalk via Gnupg-users:
>> > And further, why should anyone run something like a ca CA for free.
>> > Sure, CAcert does it. But that's the
On December 9, 2018 7:54:01 AM EST, Stefan Claas
wrote::
>
>Get a sig from a CA and then upload your key via email.
>
That's a bit steep, and was never the original goal of PGP or GPG.
If the goal is to eliminate the bulk of bad keys and junk from key servers, an
account creation with basic ema
This is the error message I get in gpg2 with (my own) key. GnuPG 2.2.9~11 gives
me no indication that anything is wrong with the key until I am prompted for
the passphrase, and then even the correct passphrase is rejected.
Please enter the passphrase to unlock the OpenPGP secret key:
"justi
Garbled again! Encrypted by mistake, apparently only to myself. The attachment
is the part starting "BEGIN PGP MESSAGE".
Copy & paste that part into a text editor and save as backup_2018-12-07.sec.pgp
Original Message ----
From: justina colmena via Gnupg-users
Se
binoc22_9r__X.bin
Description: application/pgp-encrypted
encrypted.asc
Description: Binary data
___
Gnupg-users mailing list
Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
Subject: secret key data (test key)
Date: 2018-12-07
This attachment is an encrypted backup I made from the OpenKeychain app of a
test key I made for the purpose. The passphrase for this one is
5101-2272-0596-2716-2013-3210-0535-7592-9890
but it looks like the whole thing is encrypted by symmet
A keyserver is a convenience. Of course it's not magic. Right now I am using
K-9 Mail and OpenKeychain on Android. When I received the above message from
the list, K-9 Mail informed me that it was signed with a key with fingerprint
"0xff80ae9d1dec358d", and referred me to the OpenKeychain app,
Hello GnuPG users!
This is somewhat related to a discussion from last month.
https://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-users/2018-November/061122.html
To answer the question about GnuPG on Android, the most useful application I
have found so far is called OpenKeychain.
https://www.openkeychain.o
Sorry. Missing signature. Hit send too soon.
Original Message
From: justina colmena
Sent: December 4, 2018 10:56:27 AM AKST
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: GnuPG on Android
Hello GnuPG users!
This is somewhat related to a discussion from last month.
https://lists.gnupg.or
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