On 2013-10-31 12:24:49 +0100 (+0100), Thierry Carrez wrote: > OK, made it official [...]
And: https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/OpenPGP_Web_of_Trust/Icehouse_Summit If you add yourself to the table there in the wiki by noon the day before, I'll try to bring a stack of printouts we can use as checklists. With only 30 minutes and places to get from/to between sessions, it's going to be tight timing if many people want to participate. Don't feel like you have to get through everyone on the list... it would be nice, but as long as enough interested attendees participate and we each get a few signatures out of the effort it will still be a great start. Just a reminder of how these things go, in case you haven't participated before--this is really about meeting in person and checking names/photos/key fingerprints. The actual key signing can (and should, in the interest of time) happen later at your convenience... probably after we get home from the summit for many of us because it will be a very busy week already. Also, be prepared that some participants will decide after reviewing your identification no to sign your key. This is perfectly natural, as key signing choices are a matter of personal preference (some people might care about strict name matching, may be uncertain of the validity of your ID, or could have a hard time recognizing your old photo from when you still had long hair and didn't need glasses yet). In my opinion that additional individuality only leads to a healthier web of trust and is not something you should ever consider an insult. Also, I'll be around at the conference every day with my ID and key fingerprint cards too (as I expect will some others). So if you can't get to the Thursday slot for other reasons and want to exchange ID with someone, just let them know and see if they might be able to work out a quick face-to-face in the hallway, at lunch or maybe during one of the evening parties. -- Jeremy Stanley _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
