Hi there,
I have two smart cards, a regular card that I plug into the builtin reader of my
laptop and a yubikey, that have two different keys on them. I store some
passwords in a file that is encrypted with both keys.
When I try to access the passwords, pinentry will always ask me to insert the
y
On 5/11/20 10:11 PM, Robert J. Hansen - r...@sixdemonbag.org wrote:
This arrived in my inbox: I'm presenting it here without comment.
You've advised people to use a HORRIBLE practice of using dictionary
words solely for their password. I tested this theory myself back in the
day, so I can 100%
On 12-05-2020 3:46, Pete Stephenson via Gnupg-users wrote:
> For example, a 256 bit elliptic curve key has a similar strength to a
> symmetric key of 128 bits.
Until, of course, a working quantum computer with more than a few qubits
is constructed. Then ECC is much more vulnerable than RSA or El
Hi Valentin,
I believe this will work seamlessly in GnuPG 2.3.
You can track this ticket: https://dev.gnupg.org/T4695
Kind regards,
Wiktor
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https://metacode.biz/@wiktor
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Wiktor Kwapisiewicz [2020-05-12 14:08] wrote:
> Hi Valentin,
>
> I believe this will work seamlessly in GnuPG 2.3.
>
> You can track this ticket: https://dev.gnupg.org/T4695
Hi Wiktor, thanks for the reply. That issue is indeed what initially prompted me
to make a second key for the second card
> Even using only English words greater than 5 letters and unrelated to
> each other, an extremely low-bound estimate, would be 77760 words.
> (in reality, far greater, but let's use an example people would agree
> on).
This is probably not the best metric. The length of the word is
irrelevant: i
On Dienstag, 12. Mai 2020 10:56:19 CEST Valentin Ochs wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I have two smart cards, a regular card that I plug into the builtin reader
> of my laptop and a yubikey, that have two different keys on them. I store
> some passwords in a file that is encrypted with both keys.
>
> When
Le 12.05.20 à 11:24, Johan Wevers a écrit :
On 12-05-2020 3:46, Pete Stephenson via Gnupg-users wrote:
For example, a 256 bit elliptic curve key has a similar strength to a symmetric
key of 128 bits.
Until, of course, a working quantum computer with more than a few qubits
is constructed. The
Sylvain Besençon via Gnupg-users wrote:
> Le 12.05.20 à 11:24, Johan Wevers a écrit :
> > On 12-05-2020 3:46, Pete Stephenson via Gnupg-users wrote:
> >
> >> For example, a 256 bit elliptic curve key has a similar strength
> >> to a symmetric key of 128 bits.
> >
> > Until, of course, a working
On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 11:24:57AM +0200, Johan Wevers wrote:
> > For example, a 256 bit elliptic curve key has a similar strength to
> > a symmetric key of 128 bits.
>
> Until, of course, a working quantum computer with more than a few qubits
> is constructed.
Don't worry, there's literally tri
W dniu 12.05.2020 o 17:04, Sylvain Besençon via Gnupg-users pisze:
> In the FAQ, it is written:
>> Will GnuPG ever support RSA-3072 or RSA-4096 by default?
>> Probably not. The future is elliptical-curve cryptography, which will bring
>> a level of safety comparable to RSA-16384. Every minute we s
On 12-05-2020 17:04, Sylvain Besençon via Gnupg-users wrote:
>> Probably not. The future is elliptical-curve cryptography, which will
>> bring a level of safety comparable to RSA-16384.
Yes, if attacked by classical computers.
> However, I would be interested to know which ECC cipher would you
>
> However, I would be interested to know which ECC cipher would you
> recommend to replace RSA.
"Yes". :)
Back when we got these questions -- Elgamal? RSA? DSA? Help? -- we
used to tell people what mattered far, far more than which algorithm
they used was how much care they gave to their syst
Question,
Is there anything out there, think bittorrent-sync, that allows for syncing
your full keyring between devices? Would it be enough to simply use
bittorrent-sync to sync your .gnupg folder?
I get the —export / —import but what about automating it a lil’ bit? Something
peer to peer pre
Robert J. Hansen rjh at sixdemonbag.org wrote on
Tue May 12 16:41:09 CEST 2020:
>You can get by just fine in most everyday English with a vocabulary of
>5,000 words. Stick to those words and you'll have an easy-to-remember
>passphrase.
=
That's absolutely correct, Horse! Battery Staple
htt
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