> And to think I blew a gasket because I grossly misinterpreted this sentence:
To clarify: I think that the body politic should thank producers of food for being willing to throw away food (and thus, profit) in the interests of preserving the safety of the public's food supply. That's all. The reason why I find the metaphor appropriate for GnuPG is because it highlights the different responsibilities producers have versus consumers. A producer is expected to provide product (food, encrypted communications, whatever) that exceeds the standard of the consumer. Similarly, the use case of "I forgot to add a new expiration date on my own key" is different from the use case of "my correspondent forgot to add a new expiration date on his key". These two use cases revolve around policy, not mechanism. In the former, whether you want to hack up the system time to get around the expiration issue is wholly your lookout -- whatever policy one decides, I neither get to judge it nor comment on it. In the latter, I get to say, "I cannot imagine a world where this makes sense. The certificate has expired; don't use it." Again, producers are -- must be -- held to a higher standard than consumers. Peter, I hope this makes my feelings on the matter clear. It was not my intent to tell you how to run your refrigerator, or that you are somehow doing it incorrectly. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users