On Mon, 2011-01-17 at 11:01 -0600, Albert Wagner wrote:
> > And I don't think you need to be particularly "experienced" with them to
> > let a program use keyrings - it's just an encrypted store of passwords.
> My login password allows anyone with access to it, including evolution
> developers, to perform actions requiring root permissions.

Er, what?? How do evolution developers have access to your password via
use of the keyring?  They don't, can't, and I suspect you don't
understand are keyrings work.

Even if they did have your username and password, which they don't, how
would that allow "root" permissions?  Unless you are logging in as root,
which you shouldn't.

>  Giving you
> access to my login password is a severe security breach, and all for
> your convenience, not mine. Frankly, I am surprised that you have been
> getting away it.  Haven't any other users complained?

I am a user, and have not complained, because there is *nothing* to
complain about.  The GNOME keyring is a part of GNOME for managing
sensitive information - it is encrypted and itself password protected.
You can change the password/pass-phrase on your keyring if you like -
just install the amazing Seahorse application and you can also remove
individual entries from the keyring.

_______________________________________________
evolution-list mailing list
[email protected]
To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list

Reply via email to