> On 14 Feb 2017, at 19:53, Kristian Fiskerstrand
> wrote:
>
> Trust level is not a property of the public key, it is stored out of
> band (in the local trustdb)
Ah ok. Thanks.
Marko
---
Marko Bauhardt
https://keybase.io/mbauhardt
GPG Key ID: 53192101
GPG Fingerprint: DC0F E851 82A3 72E3
On 02/14/2017 07:51 PM, Marko Bauhardt wrote:
> The trust level of my two IDs was `unknown` in the one public key and
> `ultimate` in the other key.
Trust level is not a property of the public key, it is stored out of
band (in the local trustdb)
--
Kristian Fiskerst
Hi Peter,
> On 13 Feb 2017, at 12:16, Peter Lebbing wrote:
>
>
> An OpenPGP public key is composed of many parts which can be reordered
> without changing the meaning. Keyservers do reorder stuff, so you can't
> just compare two keys byte by byte and say anything useful about their
> equivalenc
On 12/02/17 13:32, Marko Bauhardt wrote:
> Hi,
> The amor definition of my public key i uploaded
> to hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net differs to the public key
> definition i uploaded to another web service.
An OpenPGP public key is composed of many parts which can be reordered
without changin
>
> Signed PGP part
> You can add signatures, user-ids, subkeys, etc. to a key that is
> already on the server. But you cannot delete anything from it.
Sure, understood. But this does not answer the question i have why i can not
upload my current local GPG public key to a key server? Again i ge
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
On Sunday 12 February 2017 at 12:32:06 PM, in
, Marko Bauhardt
wrote:-
> Is there a rule or something which prevents the
> update of a key?
You can add signatures, user-ids, subkeys, etc. to a key that is
already on the server. But you cannot de
Hi,
The amor definition of my public key i uploaded to
hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net
differs to the public key definition i uploaded to another web service. When i
import both key pairs the result looks the same. I don’t know exactly what the
difference is.
Anyway, i want to update my a