> Their PGP keys have expired =) > > No, they haven't .. learn about ISO date formats : http://www.iso.org/iso/date_and_time_format
It's called "calendar date", and goes from largest element to smallest, eg: YYYY-MM-DD > Expires: 2009-10-01 > That'd be the First day of October, 2009. GPG uses ISO-format dates : $wget ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gnupg/gnupg-1.4.9.tar.bz2 tar -jxvf gnupg-1.4.9.tar.bz2 $more ./gnupg-1.4.9/doc/DETAILS "All dates are displayed in the format yyyy-mm-dd unless you use the option --fixed-list-mode in which case they are displayed as seconds since Epoch." Cheers, Michael Holstein Cleveland State University _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
