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Hello,
El 21-01-2015 a las 7:58, s7r escribió:
> Thank you very much for your reply.
...
> I have the public key of John Doe . He has
> more UserIDs associated with the same masterkey, as follows: John
> Doe John Smith Bob
> Jones Primary UserI
On Wed 2015-01-21 05:58:40 -0500, s7r wrote:
> Understood. I guess this has to be done via console commands, since
> the pour enigmail thundebird addon has very limited options when
> creating/editing a GPG key.
yes, what you're trying to do is rather unusual; enigmail intends to
deliver a smooth
On Wed, 21 Jan 2015 11:58, s...@sky-ip.org said:
> I have 2 masterkeys, each with a subkey. Any way I can merge them
> together so I would have one primary key and 3 subkeys?
With < 2.1 this is quite some work. With 2.1 it is easier. Here is an
example. First list the key with the subkey you w
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Thank you very much for your reply.
Please see my comments below in the replied text:
On 1/21/2015 4:36 AM, Daniel Kahn Gillmor wrote:
> On Mon 2015-01-12 10:13:48 -0500, s7r wrote:
>> Is it possible to have one masterkey with two subkeys (sbind),
>
On Mon 2015-01-12 10:13:48 -0500, s7r wrote:
> Is it possible to have one masterkey with two subkeys (sbind), one for
> encrypt only and one for sign only, and each of them to have different
> passphrases?
Yes, it is possible. with gpg 2.1, you can create new subkeys and give
each of them a diffe
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Hi,
Is it possible to have one masterkey with two subkeys (sbind), one for
encrypt only and one for sign only, and each of them to have different
passphrases?
Additionally, how can I select in enigmail which userID I want to sign
when signing a key w
On 07/16/2014 09:24 PM, Phillip Susi wrote:
> I would like to protect the master key with a password that is different
> from that used on the daily use subkey
I take the Low Road and use two different key rings, the "master" key
ring in a non-default location ("gpg --homedir /path/to/master .
Am Do 17.07.2014, 23:39:53 schrieb MFPA:
> > in short: use gpgsplit to split the key, then import
> > one part, set passphrase A, export it (encrypted with
> > A), delete it, then import the other part, set
> > passphrase B.
>
> Do you actually need gpgsplit to achieve this? I thought you could
>
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Hi
On Thursday 17 July 2014 at 9:44:15 AM, in
, flapflap wrote:
> in short: use gpgsplit to split the key, then import
> one part, set passphrase A, export it (encrypted with
> A), delete it, then import the other part, set
> passphrase B.
Do yo
Phillip Susi:
> I keep a subkey pair for daily use that I keep a copy of on my work
> machine, and reissue each yea and the master key only at home. I
> would like to protect the master key with a password that is different
> from that used on the daily use subkey, but when I use --edit-key and
>
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I keep a subkey pair for daily use that I keep a copy of on my work
machine, and reissue each yea and the master key only at home. I
would like to protect the master key with a password that is different
from that used on the daily use subkey, but w
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