Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Friday 14 April 2006 01:45 pm, Teresa and Dale wrote: Ralph Slooten wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. Signature is fine (imported automatically here), and don't worry about the key servers, most of them sync with eachother ;-) I tried to set mine up but couldn't get anywhere with it. Then I moved and changed email addresses anyway so I have no clue where to start. Well, I use KMail, which is nice. I first installed KGPG, which works to encrypt and sign messages and files. Create a key there. Then KMail pretty much works next to KGPG really well. Upload your key a few keyservers via right clicking on the KGPG icon in the system tray. This is assuming you use KDE, though. I don't know how to do it in Gnome. All that said, where is that guide you were using?? I need one if I am going to set this up for mine too. As far as the reference I used, it was for how to organise a keysigning party. It still has a great deal of relevant information though. http://www.cryptnet.net/fdp/crypto/gpg-party.html I also found http://www.cryptnet.net/fdp/crypto/gpg-party.html#ss5.1 very useful. I didn't read it all the way through, so I don't know how much more info it has that I don't know about. Enjoy! Thanks No problem. I just hope they can start integrating this stuff into GMail, so that when I'm not using my laptop and rather using GMail's excellent web interface I can enjoy the same key signing as I do here. The really cool thing about all this is that when I used Windows and (GASP) Outlook (not for long - I couldn't stand its overpowering bloatedness) the only way to sign or encrypt was with a key issued from some massive corporation or the Post Office. $15. I didn't need it that bad, so I didn't get it. Here, with the GPG stuff, it's free! This is so cool... If I'm ever able I'll try hosting a keyserver too, though that'll happen only when I have the raw bandwidth to do so : ( I use Mozilla mail. I like it because I can right click on links and open them in tabs. It comes in handy since I help on some forums too. I'll have to work on this one day. I'm disabled and have health problems, which is driving me nuts right now. Plus my girlfriend decided to go mud riding in her Dad's big truck, read that as she had a wreck and broke some ribs. Throw in two kids and I am having a good bit of fun right now. My lady has cable modem. zoom zoom zoom. I get about 1.5MB/sec here, especially late at night. On dial-up my emerge sync took about 45 minutes. Now it takes very little time at all: real12m35.937s user8m37.284s sys 0m24.046s [EMAIL PROTECTED] / # much faster. :D Most of that is the metadata thing now though. Maybe one day. o_O Back to bed now. It's only 2:45AM here. O_O Dale :-) -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did some homework, did some Google searches, and figured out how to sign my email with Kgpg. I configured KMail, during which I came to the conclusion that spamassassin needs to be left serverside - importing ~8,000 messages from GMail while spamassassin tried to scan them all was an absolute nightmare which ultimately involved emerge --unmerge spamassassin. Anyways, since it's totally impractical to try and get all of you people to a formal key signing, I'm hoping you'll take my word for this and trust that this key which I sign my message with now is THE key I intend to use for as long as I can get away with. Hopefully this will help with that total nut case who was impersonating my email! Just a follow-up on that guy. I think that he's a spammer, testing his capability at phishing by spoofing off of other people's domains and their email. My best guess is that he picked me as a target, since I am a rather salient participant in many mailing lists, just to make sure he could properly spoof off of other domains, thus allowing him to do more sinister things than try and make me to a double-take when I find something that looks like I emailed it to myself in my inbox! Thanks for your patience in this matter, and I hope that we can all continue to work towards a web where we don't need spamassassin or gpg. I know I am. Hi, Why not use a keyserver to keep your key, there are enough of them ;) GnuPG can be setup to use one or more keyservers (same for Kmail,TB,Evo) Plus configure it the auto-fetch new/unknown keys, then forget about it. HTH.Rumen -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2.2-ecc0.1.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFEP/RANbtuTtsWD3wRAvEFAKCDqHJg+cJP5Q4cdO5lsGAw3mLtMACgnubc 7drNWDORHiOTIBTomtBvTkA= =Aqxt -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
On Friday 14 April 2006 12:13 pm, Rumen Yotov wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did some homework, did some Google searches, and figured out how to sign my email with Kgpg. I configured KMail, during which I came to the conclusion that spamassassin needs to be left serverside - importing ~8,000 messages from GMail while spamassassin tried to scan them all was an absolute nightmare which ultimately involved emerge --unmerge spamassassin. Anyways, since it's totally impractical to try and get all of you people to a formal key signing, I'm hoping you'll take my word for this and trust that this key which I sign my message with now is THE key I intend to use for as long as I can get away with. Hopefully this will help with that total nut case who was impersonating my email! Just a follow-up on that guy. I think that he's a spammer, testing his capability at phishing by spoofing off of other people's domains and their email. My best guess is that he picked me as a target, since I am a rather salient participant in many mailing lists, just to make sure he could properly spoof off of other domains, thus allowing him to do more sinister things than try and make me to a double-take when I find something that looks like I emailed it to myself in my inbox! Thanks for your patience in this matter, and I hope that we can all continue to work towards a web where we don't need spamassassin or gpg. I know I am. Hi, Why not use a keyserver to keep your key, there are enough of them ;) GnuPG can be setup to use one or more keyservers (same for Kmail,TB,Evo) Plus configure it the auto-fetch new/unknown keys, then forget about it. HTH.Rumen I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. pgpDXPbR5n5WJ.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. Signature is fine (imported automatically here), and don't worry about the key servers, most of them sync with eachother ;-) -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFEQBX1Ct0ZF9kLPvYRAilpAKCKR687gzCL1HWd9bT437gmwAJGlACfRwLa WLmImki5DR6/AE5BJair1DM= =Yv+n -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
Ralph Slooten wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. Signature is fine (imported automatically here), and don't worry about the key servers, most of them sync with eachother ;-) I tried to set mine up but couldn't get anywhere with it. Then I moved and changed email addresses anyway so I have no clue where to start. All that said, where is that guide you were using?? I need one if I am going to set this up for mine too. Thanks Dale :-) :-) -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
On Friday 14 April 2006 02:36 pm, Ralph Slooten wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. Signature is fine (imported automatically here), and don't worry about the key servers, most of them sync with eachother ;-) Oh, that's really cool. However, while searching for Rumen's key, I didn't find it on most of the keyservers. Is this just because they only syncronise once a month or so, or is the key new, or were the keyservers just not syncing between the ones I tried first? pgpFdWqkxIEbi.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Now Signing Messages
On Friday 14 April 2006 01:45 pm, Teresa and Dale wrote: Ralph Slooten wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I did. However, I sent the key anyway so that you don't have to go hunting for which keyservers I was able to use. Some of them didn't work. I'll re-try later, but right now there's a few (about two or three - I don't remember exactly) servers which I wasn't able to upload to. The important thing is that I think I got through the process correctly. If I missed something please tell me. Signature is fine (imported automatically here), and don't worry about the key servers, most of them sync with eachother ;-) I tried to set mine up but couldn't get anywhere with it. Then I moved and changed email addresses anyway so I have no clue where to start. Well, I use KMail, which is nice. I first installed KGPG, which works to encrypt and sign messages and files. Create a key there. Then KMail pretty much works next to KGPG really well. Upload your key a few keyservers via right clicking on the KGPG icon in the system tray. This is assuming you use KDE, though. I don't know how to do it in Gnome. All that said, where is that guide you were using?? I need one if I am going to set this up for mine too. As far as the reference I used, it was for how to organise a keysigning party. It still has a great deal of relevant information though. http://www.cryptnet.net/fdp/crypto/gpg-party.html I also found http://www.cryptnet.net/fdp/crypto/gpg-party.html#ss5.1 very useful. I didn't read it all the way through, so I don't know how much more info it has that I don't know about. Enjoy! Thanks No problem. I just hope they can start integrating this stuff into GMail, so that when I'm not using my laptop and rather using GMail's excellent web interface I can enjoy the same key signing as I do here. The really cool thing about all this is that when I used Windows and (GASP) Outlook (not for long - I couldn't stand its overpowering bloatedness) the only way to sign or encrypt was with a key issued from some massive corporation or the Post Office. $15. I didn't need it that bad, so I didn't get it. Here, with the GPG stuff, it's free! This is so cool... If I'm ever able I'll try hosting a keyserver too, though that'll happen only when I have the raw bandwidth to do so : ( pgpI4Bh2zcPPs.pgp Description: PGP signature