How to download commit packages from gnupg phabricator?

2024-03-06 Thread Vladimir Nikishkin via Gnupg-users
Dear All,

I would like to try the GnuPG Password Manager
(https://dev.gnupg.org/source/gpgpass/)

However, I don't seem to be able to find a way to download a tarball
of the commit in any way.

I looked at the source of Phabricator, and it seems that support for
downloading zips exists:
https://secure.phabricator.com/rP8bb6e807f097b2eb58f863822d64c5078878355d

But for some reason the links like
https://dev.gnupg.org/source/gpgpass/zip/master/;f46437b49b30257a7e98f98803c42c369b0748e8.zip
or
https://dev.gnupg.org/source/gpgpass/zip/;f46437b49b30257a7e98f98803c42c369b0748e8.zip
don't seem to work

-- 
Yours sincerely, Vladimir Nikishkin
(Sent from GMail web interface.)

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Re: Follow-up on L'Affaire Stallman

2021-04-08 Thread Vladimir Nikishkin via Gnupg-users
I'm just a user, but since this mailing list is called "users", and
for clairity:

>>Always has, hasn't it.  I look at that for hm a long time, and it
always was like that.

The FAQ (https://www.gnupg.org/faq/gnupg-faq.html) claims the other
way round, namely:

>GnuPG is free cryptographic software from the GNU Project which helps people 
>ensure the confidentiality, integrity and assurance of their data. Let’s try 
>that again: GnuPG is…

>GNU Project. The GNU Project is a group that aims to give people the ability 
>to do all their computing with free software.

So I, as a user, was completely sure that GnuPG _is_ (or, at least,
was) an official GNU Project.

Regarding the Stallman story, the community seems to be split roughly
by a third, with one third of activists having signed an open letter
with criticism, and two thirds considering the criticism unjustified
(and having signed the support letter).

On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 at 01:59, Steffen Nurpmeso  wrote:
>
> This is solely my opinion.  But i have to say it now.
>
> Robert J. Hansen wrote in
>  <3e47e65a-790f-e323-7a0c-c14660cd2...@sixdemonbag.org>:
>  |A few weeks have passed, and I figured a recap might be appropriate:
>  |
>  | * FSF continues to support RMS
>
> I have no opinion on that.  I do not know him, nor whatever.
> I saw some code from him twenty years ago and did not like it :)
> However, i did say in the past that i would allow him to travel by
> airplane, if it would be me, which is much more than i allow
> myself.  And i stand to this opinion.
>
>  | * FSFE has ended collaboration with FSF and GNU ("we see
>  |   ourselves unable to collaborate both with the FSF and any
>  |   other organisation in which Richard Stallman has a
>  |   leading position")
>
> The thing is that we live in a bigot world as gods and destroy
> live without just any respect.  Most humans are very small minded
> and go for "each cheap piece of meat" just "to sneak away with
> it".  Really, i am bored, thus.  Sigh.  Anyhow.  In the western
> world cruelty and abuse and anti-social behaviour rather has
> become the norm, but everywhere you find that elder suppress the
> younger.  Even more so if you _see_.
>
> So to tear open the indolence and coldness with which especially
> solvent white (but not only white) people perch upon exploitation
> of all possible kinds, environment, finite resources, literally
> billions of livestock, child and other sexual abuse can only be
> a good thing.  The living conditions that our/the tremendous
> military and economic terror generates.  All this nothing but
> a shame, that hole is too dark and deep, yet it exists.
>
> Quite the opposite, who does risk a saturated and comfortable life
> in order to aid for something better, at times is called a hero.
> Well i would not go that far here, Mr. Stallman is from or
> directly descends from a generation which actually had a quite
> good outcome of people who tried to make the white race better.
> Unfortunately, without success. :(
>
> Anyhow.  There are too many narrow-minded individuals who (due to
> whatever shortcoming) are not capable to put things in the actual
> context of actual life as it really is (imho).
>
>  | * GnuPG has clarified it's not part of GNU
>
> Always has, hasn't it.  I look at that for hm a long time, and it
> always was like that.
>
> Thank you.  And have a nice day.
>
> --steffen
> |
> |Der Kragenbaer,The moon bear,
> |der holt sich munter   he cheerfully and one by one
> |einen nach dem anderen runter  wa.ks himself off
> |(By Robert Gernhardt)
>
> ___
> Gnupg-users mailing list
> Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
> http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users



-- 
Yours sincerely, Vladimir Nikishkin
(Sent from GMail web interface.)

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RSS/Atom for the GnuPG blog?

2021-01-21 Thread Vladimir Nikishkin via Gnupg-users
Hello, everyone

There is a nice blog that GnuPG people write:
https://www.gnupg.org/blog/index.html

But there seems to be no way to subscribe to it via standard Atom/RSS
feed.
Is this intentional? Or maybe I just haven't found the links?

Thanks.
-- 
Vladimir Nikishkin (MiEr, lockywolf)
(Laptop)

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Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-06 Thread Vladimir Nikishkin via Gnupg-users


>This ruling is more similar to rules that you are not required to wear
>a badge that you spent some time in jail or need to state this in your CV.

It is a ruling that gives more power to the government, whatever the
"declared goal" actually is. The actual usage of this rule is to hide
blatant evidence of corruption of government officials from public
sources.


Werner Koch via Gnupg-users  writes:

> On Tue,  5 Jan 2021 17:07, Robert J. Hansen said:
>
>> I'm doing is sharing true things with my buddy?"  Whereas in Europe,
>> right-to-be-forgotten laws, enforced by the government, are seen as
>> wins for privacy, in America they would be (a) blatantly unlawful and
>
> I don't think that the right not to be listed prominently in search
> results is related to privacy.  This ruling is more similar to rules
> that you are not required to wear a badge that you spent some time in
> jail or need to state this in your CV.
>
>> In Europe it's a lot different.  There, the prevailing culture cares a
>> lot more about limiting the ability of businesses to learn things about
>> a person than with limiting the ability of governments.  The national
>
> Like all over the world governments work on terminating all rules which
> limit their power.  It seems to be a never-ending task to counter that.
>
> Speaking of Germany: There are a lot of barriers between administrative
> entities to share data - there is not even a central database of all
> citizens.  There is no shared access between the databases of the police
> and the spooks.  The spooks tried to tell us that it is okay to
> eavesdrop as long as no German citizen is part of the communication but
> courts declared such a workaround as illegal.  But yes, all these laws
> and rulings wind up faster and faster :-(
>
>
> Shalom-Salam,
>
>Werner


-- 
Vladimir Nikishkin (MiEr, lockywolf)
(Laptop)

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