Citing from the linked source: >And here’s the thing… If Enigmail is called before Send Later, then the message is encrypted with the recipient’s public key, at which point it is no longer decryptable by the sender. Then, when Send Later is called, if the user decides to cancel scheduling the message, e.g., to go back to editing it, the message is now /completely unreadable to the sender, and its contents are completely lost./ And that is why…
Isn't Enigmail/GnuPG encrypting the message with both the recipients and the senders key? Sebastian On 05/19/2016 04:20 PM, Elias Assmann wrote: > On 05/19/2016 03:55 PM, Elias Assmann wrote: >> I found this >> <http://blog.kamens.us/send-later#enigmail>, but it does not really >> explain why it is impossible for the two to interoperate. > PS: To be fair, in the comments section of that page, there is an > explanation > <http://blog.kamens.us/send-later/comment-page-3/#comment-1583092>. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > enigmail-users mailing list > [email protected] > To unsubscribe or make changes to your subscription click here: > https://admin.hostpoint.ch/mailman/listinfo/enigmail-users_enigmail.net > > -- > python programming - mail server - photo - video - https://sebix.at > cryptographic key at https://sebix.at/DC9B463B.asc and on public keyservers
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