Thanks, I checked the following per your advice
1. Are any of the certs ECC?
No, they all appear to be RSA keys.
2. Has the org root cert been imported?
I believe so, yes. There are three certs in the chain. My s/MIME
cert, it's parent, and its "grandparent". Both gpgsm and the Windows
Cert
On Wed, 13 Mar 2019 03:03, dkbry...@gmail.com said:
> $ echo hi | gpgsm --sign --armor --default-key 0x64208E9A
> --disable-crl-checks --disable-policy-checks
> gpgsm: error creating signature: No value
Please always add -v or --verbose to the invocation if you run into
problems. This gives mor
So I work for a large company that has their own internal CA and
maintains their own set of S/MIME certificates. We periodically have
to re-enroll in S/MIME and import the certificate into Microsoft
Outlook to have encrypt / sign functionality. This time when I
enrolled for my recent certificate,
Well,
I thought about a makro or something similar.
But thanks anyway!
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John W. Moore III
> Sent: Dienstag, 5. Juli 2005 20:32
> To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
> Subject: Re
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: RIPEMD160
When you have composed your email, but before hitting SEND; click on the
little down arrow next to the S/MIME button and remove the check mark
next to Digitally Sign and Digitally Encrypt. Then hit SEND!
JOHN :)
Timestamp: Tue 05 July 2005, 0231