Le 19/12/2013 11:08, Werner Koch a écrit :
> GnuPG encryption project launches crowdfunding campaign
>
> Today GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) has launched its first crowdfunding
> campaign [1] with the aim of building a new website and long term
> infrastructure. The 24.000 EUR target will fund:
>
> -
On So, Dez 15 2013, Jens Lechtenboerger wrote:
> Does dirmngr only speak LDAPv2? If I configure a LDAPv3 server, it
> complains about the “historical protocol” upon bind from dirmngr.
> This appears to indicate use of v2 by dirmngr.
As a workaround I retrieve certificates with ldapsearch (LDAPv3
Hi,
me lacking the time to write an update of the 10 Years of GnuPG [2],
Sam Tuke was kind enough to draft this:
16 Years of protecting privacy
══
Today marks 16 years since the first release of GNU Privacy Guard
(GnuPG). In that time the project has grown fr
* on the Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 07:03:57PM +0100, Werner Koch wrote:
>> Since you are mentioned in this webpage, do you know by any chance
>> whether gpgsm is vulnerable in a similar way?
>
> gpgsm uses Libgcrypt and Libgcrypt employs RSA blinding for a long time
> now. Thus it is not vulnerable.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 20/12/13 10:28, Mike Cardwell wrote:
> I have a V2 OpenPGP SmartCard. I'm wondering if this would be vulnerable to
> the attack in question? Also, what about the Crypto Stick? Presumably these
> generate the same sort of noise during signing/decrypt
Yes we've reached 109% of the minimum goal - thanks to everyone who contributed
for your support!
Sam.
Christophe Brocas wrote:
>Le 19/12/2013 11:08, Werner Koch a écrit :
>> GnuPG encryption project launches crowdfunding campaign
>>
>> Today GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) has launched its first cr
On 20/12/13 12:08, Sam Tuke wrote:
> Yes we've reached 109% of the minimum goal - thanks to everyone who
> contributed
> for your support!
111% of optimum now: EUR 24.151! In slightly more than a day. Congratulations!
Very cool.
Peter.
--
I use the GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) in combination wit
Le 20/12/2013 13:28, Peter Lebbing a écrit :
> On 20/12/13 12:08, Sam Tuke wrote:
>> Yes we've reached 109% of the minimum goal - thanks to everyone who
>> contributed
>> for your support!
> 111% of optimum now: EUR 24.151! In slightly more than a day. Congratulations!
>
> Very cool.
>
> Peter.
>
On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 06:38:30PM +0100, Julian H. Stacey wrote:
> Johannes Zarl wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Maybe my English is a little rusty, but what exactly is a "spanking server"?
>
> Presumably a contraction from "brand spanking new" a phrase normal
> & common in England when I grew up there.
On Thu, 19 Dec 2013 21:39, pe...@digitalbrains.com said:
> PS: By the way, why does goteo.org insist on speaking what looks like Spanish
> to
> me? I intended to read the privacy policy, but it insisted on showing me
Right, there is no transaltion. This has been reported by several
contributors
There has been a major development in the U.S. regarding government
surveillance. Y'all might enjoy reading the following link.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/dec/19/white-house-says-its-open-45-panels-proposed-46-ns/
Notably for us (but not mentioned in the news article), the commi
According to the raw source of your message, you are running:
"User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101
Thunderbird/24.2.0"
User-Agent strings lie. :)
Take a look at the original message. In the OpenPGP signature there
was a comment block identifying it as having b
On Fri, 20 Dec 2013 00:07, r...@sixdemonbag.org said:
> Werner is free to tell the list how many funds were raised, how many I
247 Euro from Dec 7 to 18. 514 Euro the last two days; obviously as a
side effect of the Goteo campaign. That are the raw Paypal numbers.
> request he keep my (private
On 12/19/2013 09:28 PM, David Shaw wrote:
> On Dec 19, 2013, at 7:10 PM, Eric Swanson wrote:
>
>> I'm trying to import a "raw" RSA secret key into GnuPG.
>>
>> I have p, q, d and the creation timestamp, as well as anything else
>> that can be computed from them (n, u, e, etc etc).
>>
>> I've been
On 12/20/2013 08:21 AM, Eric Swanson wrote:
> This is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!
There's a script called keytrans (with a symblink called pem2openpgp)
that's bundled with the monkeysphere source code might do exactly what
you need.
apt-get source monkeyspherecd monkeysphere-0.36/src/
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Hi
On Thursday 19 December 2013 at 6:00:47 PM, in
, Werner Koch wrote:
> A reason might be that they have concerns publishing a
> translation if not done by lawyer. However, the
> half-translated TOS would contradict this assumption.
I shouldn't
On 12/20/2013 03:20 PM, Micah Lee wrote:
> On 12/20/2013 08:21 AM, Eric Swanson wrote:
>> This is exactly what I was looking for. Thanks!
>
> There's a script called keytrans (with a symblink called pem2openpgp)
> that's bundled with the monkeysphere source code might do exactly what
> you need.
>
Given that we've already reached my maximum matching, I'm closing things
out a little early. Thanks to everyone who contributed and forced me to
open my wallet. :)
Should anyone have any doubts, please contact Werner off-list; he'll be
able to confirm receipt of this donation.
_
On 20-12-2013 16:03, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> There has been a major development in the U.S. regarding government
> surveillance. Y'all might enjoy reading the following link.
>
> http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/dec/19/white-house-says-its-open-45-panels-proposed-46-ns/
>
> Notably fo
Symptom: In Ubuntu 13.10, 'apt-get update' has started showing several
warnings like the following, even though the keys are present:
W: GPG error: http://us.archive.ubuntu.com saucy Release: The following
signatures couldn't be verified because the public key is not available:
NO_PUBKEY 40976EAF43
> How major is this? The intelligence agencies seem to be out of control,
> not only in the US. I just read this as "they are not allowed to OPENLY
> weaken encryption standards and if we catch them someone may be scapegoated".
The President's commission on the NSA was expected to give a whitewash
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