Hey all, Considering both the complexity of material and the time constraints involved, the handbook came out beautifully. It's well-laid out and covers a surprisingly large number of topics step-by-step at a beginner level. Anyone who has a solid understanding of how to use the internet can be taught how to use common encryption tools with this manual. And that in and of itself is amazing.
While I haven't read it in its entirety, the sections I've read have been well-written and clear. The only complaints I have are entirely cosmetic -- justified text doesn't work in all areas and image compression on some images is incorrectly applied (leading to lowlow quality). Having it in wiki format is tricky because of vandalism, but perhaps turning it into a github repository might be a better option. That way, you could see updates line-by-line and cherry-pick the ones you want/don't want. Overall, it's a great project and desperately needed. Good on ya, Griffin Boyce On Thu, Oct 4, 2012 at 9:26 PM, Asher Wolf <asherw...@cryptoparty.org>wrote: > As one of the people asked to participate in the writing in the > CryptoParty Handbook, I was initially concerned about the speed at which > it was being produced. -- "I believe that usability is a security concern; systems that do not pay close attention to the human interaction factors involved risk failing to provide security by failing to attract users." ~Len Sassaman PGP Key etc: https://www.noisebridge.net/wiki/User:Fontaine
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