> Didn't look very hard, did you? :)
Before anyone accuses me of being less than helpful: Jerry asked this
same question two years ago, got an answer on-list, verified that it
solved his problem, and then just now asked the same question, got an
answer from the same person, and was referred to th
> or from the command line? I have tried Googling, but nothing useful
> ever appeared.
Didn't look very hard, did you? :)
https://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-users/2017-February/057820.html
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I am not sure if this is the best place to ask this question, but it is
a start.
I am using GPG4WIN 3.1.5 on a Windows 10 machine. Over the years, I
have accumulated several keys that are expired. Is there a way to
remove those expired keys automatically, either from within Kleopatra
or from the c
On Sun, 25 Feb 2018 14:48:23 +0100, Dirk Gottschalk via Gnupg-users stated:
>Hello.
>
>Am Samstag, den 24.02.2018, 07:20 -0500 schrieb Jerry:
>> Kleopatra Version 3.0.2-gpg4win-3.0.3
>>
>> Running the command from Kleopatra > Certificates> on a
>> Windows 10 PRO amd64 machine, displays numerou
Hello.
Am Samstag, den 24.02.2018, 07:20 -0500 schrieb Jerry:
> Kleopatra Version 3.0.2-gpg4win-3.0.3
>
> Running the command from Kleopatra Certificates> on a
> Windows 10 PRO amd64 machine, displays numerous expired certificates.
> The
> complete output is available here: https://seibercom.ne
Kleopatra Version 3.0.2-gpg4win-3.0.3
Running the command from Kleopatra on a
Windows 10 PRO amd64 machine, displays numerous expired certificates. The
complete output is available here: https://seibercom.net/GPG-Expired-Keys.txt
Is there any command that I can run from either Kleopatra or the