On 8/24/20 8:12 PM, Mark wrote:
> Am I understanding this correctly, your PGP keys are no longer secured
> with their passphrase and instead relies on the global master password
> in Thunderbird? Does that not weaken or at least somewhat minimize the
> validity of the signatures? There are numerous
Am I understanding this correctly, your PGP keys are no longer secured
with their passphrase and instead relies on the global master password
in Thunderbird? Does that not weaken or at least somewhat minimize the
validity of the signatures? There are numerous TB password recovery
programs out there
On 24.08.20 22:42, Phil Kane wrote:
On 8/24/2020 12:39 PM, Kai Engert wrote:
The Thunderbird team had originally announced to enable OpenPGP by
default in version 78.2.0
It has been decided to slightly postpone this for final changes and
testing by volunteers. It's expected to be enabled in 7
On 8/24/2020 12:39 PM, Kai Engert wrote:
>
> The Thunderbird team had originally announced to enable OpenPGP by
> default in version 78.2.0
>
> It has been decided to slightly postpone this for final changes and
> testing by volunteers. It's expected to be enabled in 78.2.1
I'm confused. I'm u
Hello,
here is an article that explains the differences between Enigmail and
the new integrated OpenPGP feature in Thunderbird 78:
https://wiki.mozilla.org/Thunderbird:OpenPGP:Migration-From-Enigmail
Regards
Kai
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enig
FYI:
The Thunderbird team had originally announced to enable OpenPGP by
default in version 78.2.0
It has been decided to slightly postpone this for final changes and
testing by volunteers. It's expected to be enabled in 78.2.1
Kai
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enigmail-u
Thunderbird 78.2 will be released soon. With that release, OpenPGP in
Thunderbird is considered complete, and Enigmail users will start to be
upgraded to Thunderbird 78. What does this mean for you:
Together with the upgrade to Thunderbird 78.2, you should obtain a
new version of Enigmail (if not,