I appreciate unchecked PGP Mime should have no bearing but it is the only way I
can get it to decrypt once and stay available for 15 minutes.
Thunderbird version 31.3.4
Enigmail 1.7.2
If I do not do this it challenges me for the pass phrase every time I click on
the email and does not allow the
On 12/15/2014 05:39 PM, outa wrote:
> $ echo $GPG_AGENT_INFO
> /run/user/1000/keyring-BUeGSx/gpg:0:1
I'm a little surprised by this, since i don't think this is where
gpg-agent 2.0.24 usually puts its socket.
> FYI, I initially disabled GNOME Keyring by adding the following lines to a
> startup
Am 15.12.2014 um 22:25 schrieb Daniel Kahn Gillmor:
> On 12/14/2014 05:45 PM, Ian Mann wrote:
>> On 15/12/14 08:36, outa wrote:
>>> I recently upgraded to Kubuntu 14.10. Since then gpg started to show that
>>> warning message about Gnome Keyring hijacking it. So I disabled Gnome
>>> Keyring and
On 12/14/2014 05:45 PM, Ian Mann wrote:
> On 15/12/14 08:36, outa wrote:
>> I recently upgraded to Kubuntu 14.10. Since then gpg started to show that
>> warning message about Gnome Keyring hijacking it. So I disabled Gnome
>> Keyring and switched to gpg-agent again, like before. However, each tim
I had to uncheck PGP/Mime under settings, Open PGP Security.
On 15/12/14 08:36, outa wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I recently upgraded to Kubuntu 14.10. Since then gpg started to show that
> warning message about Gnome Keyring hijacking it. So I disabled Gnome Keyring
> and switched to gpg-agent again, l
Hi all,
I recently upgraded to Kubuntu 14.10. Since then gpg started to show that
warning message about Gnome Keyring hijacking it. So I disabled Gnome Keyring
and switched to gpg-agent again, like before. However, each time I decrypt an
email now, gpg asks for my passphrase (apprently not cach