How does gnotary prevent the timestamps in signatures from being altered at a later time , or a stored signature of an original document be replaced with a different signature of a different document at some other time , and that altered signature also being passed on to colluding client ? On Sat Aug 27 19:01 , Sebastian Hilbert sent: >On Saturday 27 August 2005 12:33, Elizabeth Dodd wrote: >> On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 20:19, Sebastian Hilbert wrote: >> > Hi all! >> > >> > An updated GNotary client is available at >> > ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gnotary/client/0.1/ >> > >> > This version does not require a python installation. Just unzip into a >> > directory and you are ready to go. >> > >> > Currently there are two gnotary servers to choose from. >> > Client works with both but only the one at gnotary.de supports the new >> > features. Those are explained at www.gnotary.de >> > >> > Beware the site is in German until the guys from LE-PC (who extended >> > GNotary) find the time to implement gettext for perl. >> > >> > source code of the rewritten severpart and extended client will be made >> > available in October or mailed to you upon request. >> > >> > Please report issues to me or the GNotary mailing list >> > at savannah.nongnu.org/projects/gnotary >> > >> > Happy testing. Once the web interface has been translated I can make >> > non-free accounts at gnotary.de available to active GNUmedders for >> > testing. >> >> Only the windows client seems to be on the website at present (and not as >> up to date as the ftp site). I noted that there will be a free trial period >> and then a charging system. >> how will that work? >> Liz >Hi Liz, > >I am glad you asked. The confusion arises from the fact that my day has only >24 hours and I more or less focus on getting my final exam done. > >The website is not uptodate. We (me and some other students) have a developmet > >site up which will replace gnotary.de every now and then. We are not in live >mode yet. > >What we did is simple. We took the GPL GNotary code and hacked a web portal >for it to offer advanced features. Those include storing the certificates for >you, mailing you reports at intervals, mailing you printed copies for backup >at intervals, mailing you a CD every now and then, allowing you to send us >gpg encrypted mails. We also offer to publish the hash in a newspaper which >makes it even harder to manipulate. >Those are non-free services as it costs us a bunch of money. >We offer four subscription types. Free, Basic, Business, Premium. >You don't even need to register if you only want to use the free service. >Free service means. You mail us a hash. We sign it. You get it back. We don't >store, we don't track it. You are on you own. If you need more service we >will charge you. > >How ? > >You pay a monthly fee which includes CD, paper copy, report ... This packages >includes a resonable amount of mails we will process for you. If you need to >send more mails, you can by mail pakages. > >How does that sound ? Does this makes sense or not ? > >So why do you need GNotary ? It should make it a lot easier to prove to a >court that you did never change your digital documents. Be it a backup, a >ultralsound recording, whatever. > >Sebastian > > > >-- >Sebastian Hilbert >Leipzig / Germany >[www.openmed.org] -> PGP welcome, HTML ->/dev/null >ICQ: 86 07 67 86 -> No files, no URL's >VoIP: callto://[EMAIL PROTECTED] >My OS: Suse Linux. Geek by Nature, Linux by Choice > > >_______________________________________________ >Gnumed-devel mailing list >[email protected] >http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
_______________________________________________ Gnumed-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumed-devel
