> m.aflakpar...@ut.ac.ir wrote:
>> Thank you Dave,
>>
>> I tried again with this command:
>>
>> gpg --decrypt-file "myfile.gpg"
>>
>> and entered the passphrase when I was asekd to enter it.
>> But, this error comes up:
>>
>> gpg: encrypted with 1 passphrase
>> gpg: decryption error: bad key!
>
>
Have you confirmed that the passphrase you have is correct, and it's entered
correctly? I would make sure this is the issue, by checking that gpg itself
works as expected.
1. Open Notepad, write something in it. It doesn't matter what. Save the file as
test.txt or similar.
2. Use gpg to encrypt
Please remember to keep the GnuPG users' mailing list in copy in case
anyone else has any better ideas.
m.aflakpar...@ut.ac.ir wrote:
> Thank you Dave,
>
> I tried again with this command:
>
> gpg --decrypt-file "myfile.gpg"
>
> and entered the passphrase when I was asekd to enter it.
> But, th
On Mon, Oct 31, 2011 at 8:08 PM, wrote:
> I am asked a passphrase, but the problem is that it is not possible to
> write any thing in fron of the statement" Enter Passphrase:", e.i.
> whatever you type, nothing appears on the screen!
I have not used the gpg.exe you are talking about, but presuma
m.aflakpar...@ut.ac.ir wrote:
> I need to decrypt .gz.gpg files (e.g. 70195_C1_WTCCCT442627.CEL.gz.gpg).
> I have the encryption key(passphrase).
Remember that the passphrase is not the key. The key is stored in a
file, and that file is protected by the passphrase so that only people
who know the
I need to decrypt .gz.gpg files (e.g. 70195_C1_WTCCCT442627.CEL.gz.gpg).
I have the encryption key(passphrase).
I used Gnp4win and ran into this error:
"bad session key"
Then I downloaded gnupg-1.4.9 for windows from the following link:
http://techgenie.com/latest/how-to-install-gnupg-1-4-9-