On Wed, Oct 26, 2005 at 02:50:30PM -0500, Wes wrote:
> I hope this isn't something already discussed that I overlooked in the
> list..
>
> PGP 9 stores the file name in the encrypted data. You can take a file
> xyz.pgp, decrypt it, and return it to the original "My Word Doc.DOC". There
> is noth
I hope this isn't something already discussed that I overlooked in the
list..
PGP 9 stores the file name in the encrypted data. You can take a file
xyz.pgp, decrypt it, and return it to the original "My Word Doc.DOC". There
is nothing externally visible, either in a PGP Partitioned message, nor
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 20:31:15 -0500, Wes said:
> Hmm... That seems a bit kludgy, but certainly something to consider. I
> assume it would require two gpg commands - one to retrieve/import the key
> and one to do the encryption?
> I don't think this would help with accessing private keys, though
On 7/12/05 5:23 PM, "David Shaw" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A very easy way to do this is to write your code to "import" the key
> from the LDAP server into a brand new empty keyring, and then delete
> it afterwards.
Hmm... That seems a bit kludgy, but certainly something to consider. I
assum
On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 10:31:48AM -0500, Wes wrote:
> I hope this isn't a duplicate question. I can't believe it hasn't come up
> before, but I searched the 70MB archive file and found nothing.
>
> I tweaked (contorted?) our LDAP server to respond to PGP/GPG key retrieval
> requests. However, i
I hope this isn't a duplicate question. I can't believe it hasn't come up
before, but I searched the 70MB archive file and found nothing.
I tweaked (contorted?) our LDAP server to respond to PGP/GPG key retrieval
requests. However, it appears that GPG can only access the key server for
the purpo