Public bug reported: Binary package hint: seahorse
When I double-click on one of the (many) encrypted files I have (all ascii-armoured, all with the extension .asc) I get a long rude message from nautilus telling me the file doesn't have the extension its MIME type says it should and so it's probably a trojan. It does not tell me what extension I should rename the file to, and it won't decrypt the file. I can decrypt the file just fine by renaming it to .pgp; .asc is the extension produced by the KDE tool I used to encrypt the files (and it's a standard extension for ascii-armoured files, not just signatures). More generally, the extension (.pgp vs. .asc) is not really of any use in determining what the file contains (encrypted message, signed message, detached signature, public keys, private keys, some combination of the above...); the correct approach would be to claim .pgp .asc and .sig and have seahorse identify what kind of file it is. This is the version of seahorse (and nautilus etcetera) in Dapper Drake LTS, 0.9.3. ** Affects: shared-mime-info (Ubuntu) Importance: Undecided Status: Fix Released -- Not happy decrypting ascii-armored files with the standard .asc extension https://launchpad.net/bugs/66134 -- desktop-bugs mailing list desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/desktop-bugs