Hi,
On 2 Mar 2021, at 0:45, Matthias Schmidt via mailmate wrote:
>> On 1 Mar 2021, at 16:57, Matthias Schmidt via mailmate wrote:
Hi do you use PGP for signing or encrypting mail? Some time back I had to
update my ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file with this line:
personal-digest-prefere
Hi,
On 1 Mar 2021, at 19:15, Thomas Kahle wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
> On 1 Mar 2021, at 16:57, Matthias Schmidt via mailmate wrote:
>>> Hi do you use PGP for signing or encrypting mail? Some time back I had to
>>> update my ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file with this line:
>>>
>>> personal-digest-preferences SHA51
Hi,
On 1 Mar 2021, at 16:57, Matthias Schmidt via mailmate wrote:
>> Hi do you use PGP for signing or encrypting mail? Some time back I had to
>> update my ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file with this line:
>>
>> personal-digest-preferences SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224
>>
>> ...to stop MailMate complaining
Hello,
On 1 Mar 2021, at 13:04, Eric Sharakan wrote:
Hi do you use PGP for signing or encrypting mail? Some time back I
had to update my ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file with this line:
personal-digest-preferences SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224
...to stop MailMate complaining about SHA1 digests.
still
PGP ?
If so you will have to change your config
On 1 Mar 2021, at 12:48, Matthias Schmidt via mailmate wrote:
> since the update to BigSur I get this alert:
> Note that the SHA1 hash algorithm has been found to have weaknesses
> My keys are set to DSA or RSA
> How can I fix this?
_
Hi do you use PGP for signing or encrypting mail? Some time back I had to
update my ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf file with this line:
personal-digest-preferences SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224
...to stop MailMate complaining about SHA1 digests.
-Eric
On Mar 1, 2021 at 06:48:42 EST, Matthias Schmidt via mai
Hello,
since the update to BigSur I get this alert:
Note that the SHA1 hash algorithm has been found to have weaknesses
My keys are set to DSA or RSA
How can I fix this?
cheers and all the best
Matthias
___
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mailmate@lists.freron.co
On 1 Mar 2021, at 11:33, Jolin Warren wrote:
This raises another question for me, though: what would be the point
of a condition-only or action-only rule? Can anyone think of how these
might be used?
I’ve just inadvertently answered half of my question: an action-only
rule will apply to all m
On 28 Feb 2021, at 15:07, Eric Sharakan wrote:
I always assumed 'C' means condition and 'A' means action. Given that
most rules include both, you usually see "C A".
That is so obvious now you say it! And I confirmed this is indeed the
case:
![](cid:F4CBA360-6980-4908-A54E-1276B01C8476@oakand