Could we do smime as well?

If we had a list of smime cert fingerprints it can be used for trust
reinforcement

The issue is that smime email clients are more common so I would
rather teach the smime doggie pgp like tricks than vice versa


Sent from my difference engine


On Sep 6, 2013, at 1:20 PM, Michael Richardson <m...@sandelman.ca> wrote:

>
> I will be happy to participate in a pgp signing party.
> Organized or not.
>
> I suggest that an appropriate venue is during the last 15 minutes of the
> newcomer welcome and the first 15 minutes of the welcome reception.
>
> Because:
>  1) the WG-chairs and IESG will all be there, and a web of trust
>     still needs some significant good connectivity, and we already
>     know each other rather well, without needing "ID"
>     (I am not interested myself in verifying anyone's NSA^WGovernment
>     identity. I don't trust that Certification Authority...)
>
>  2) getting newbies on-board, meeting them well enough to sign
>     their key seems like a good thing.
>
> But, Randy, of what use is my signing your key, if you never use it?
>
> I would happy to sign a key for a network personality who posts
> signed message regularly to @ietf.org mailing lists.  I would simply give
> them a nonce to sign.   (For awhile, I was convince s...@resistor.net,
> whose full name I did not know until Orlando, was a gestalt network
> identity...)
>
> My key is still available via finger m...@sandelman.ca, and r...@sandelman.ca
> is offline (I used to have a 286 in the corner), and has web of trust
> signatures going back to 1994.
> pub   1024R/B0C8713D 1994-11-08 <- it's a bit weak these days.
> pub   2208R/FCA16F90 2006-10-10 <- new "modern" offline key.
>
> We just put our GPG fingerprint into the MEMO part of a vcard,
> http://zxing.appspot.com/generator/ or using qrencode
> http://fukuchi.org/works/qrencode/index.html.en (in debian/ubuntu)
>
> I suggest that perhaps this might be a useful way to exchange info:
>   http://www.sandelman.ca/tmp/IMG_20130906_125920.jpg
> one would take a picture of the other person with their QR code
> and fingerprint.  It also just works to remember the names of new people!
>
> (Sadly, I can't scan the QR code with my phone from the photo displayed
> on my screen, but I can read the fingerprint)
>
> Patrik has a blog post: http://stupid.domain.name/node/1323
> that does exactly that.
>
> ps: nice address book entry for ietf@ietf.
>
> --
> ]               Never tell me the odds!                 | ipv6 mesh networks [
> ]   Michael Richardson, Sandelman Software Works        | network architect  [
> ]     m...@sandelman.ca  http://www.sandelman.ca/        |   ruby on rails    
> [
>
>
>
>
>
>

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