On 17.05.2007 16:10, Janusz A. Urbanowicz wrote:
[...]
> When I did similar things the setup was as follows:
>
> * there is one well-guarded organization key (org key)
> * every person involved has a key signed by the org key
> * people keys have designated-revoker set to org key
> * all OpenPGP s
"Jim Berland" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> There are other flaws in the computer system that would have to be
> addressed (a secretary has root access to the server to let her start
> the daily backup process after work), but I'm not in charge of that. I
>
Huh? That requires only a single suid
Hi Alex
On 5/17/07, Janusz A. Urbanowicz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello everybody,
> >
> > I am going to try to set up GPG for our small company (about 15
> > people) and would like to ask you guys for some help. Following I will
> > write down my thoughts on this, that I had so far. Commen
On Wed, May 16, 2007 at 08:08:02PM +0800, Jim Berland wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> I am going to try to set up GPG for our small company (about 15
> people) and would like to ask you guys for some help. Following I will
> write down my thoughts on this, that I had so far. Comments would be
> high
On May 16, 2007, at 5:08 AM, Jim Berland wrote:
P.S.: I never came into contact with certificates like the ones from
Thawte or CACert.org before and I don't know anybody who uses them.
Considering the problems I see with GPG for this task, though, I
wonder if certificates would do the job bette
Hello everybody,
I am going to try to set up GPG for our small company (about 15
people) and would like to ask you guys for some help. Following I will
write down my thoughts on this, that I had so far. Comments would be
highly appreciated since I do not want to start this before I don't
feel conf