Doug Barton dougb@dougbarton.email writes:
On 3/25/15 11:08 AM, Bob (Robert) Cavanaugh wrote:
Doug,
Signature shows as an attachment signature.asc. No evidence that PGP
actions were envoked. Work forces use of Synaptic PGP, so I cannot tell if
it is verified or not.
Thanks Bob, that is
Doug Barton dougb@dougbarton.email writes:
On 3/12/15 2:59 AM, Werner Koch wrote:
On Wed, 11 Mar 2015 18:23, dougb@dougbarton.email said:
PuTTY also has its own agent support, which works quite well. I'm not
sure why it's necessary to reinvent the wheel here. :)
Because that integrates
Doug Barton dougb@dougbarton.email writes:
Otherwise, there is an easy way to solve your problem on the Windows
platform, you should strongly consider it.
I fear I do not understand. Did I miss something ? Off course I'd
rather go the easy way ! :D
Regards
-- Xavier.
Hi all,
On my workstation, I have installed cygwin and GPG4win which is
bundled with a version of gpg-agent (cygwin comes whith oldies and
no gpg-agent AFAICS).
I enabled ssh support in the gpg-agent.conf file as usual and I
clearly see the socket files for both GNUpg and SSH.
When starting a
Doug Barton dougb@dougbarton.email writes:
On 3/11/15 3:15 AM, Werner Koch wrote:
The standard ssh client on Windows seems to be Putty; you may use it
with the native GnuPG for Windows (i.e. Gpg4win) by using the option
--enable-putty-support instead of --enable-ssh-support.
PuTTY also has
Helmut Waitzmann ml.throt...@xoxy.net writes:
So it's a problem with my http proxy?
Seems like actually.
-- Xavier.
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Hello Helmut
Helmut Waitzmann ml.throt...@xoxy.net writes:
gpg2 --verbose --keyserver hkp://pool.sks-keyservers.net --send-keys --
72ABFF0923A87CF22D0ED7C4FDEE765D017077F1
try without the -- stuff:
gpg2 --verbose --keyserver
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Hi Mark,
Mark Walter mwal...@paragon-csi.com writes:
I have a pass phrase that contains an exclamation mark (!). I can
decrypt fine manually, however when I try to put this into a batch
file, and pipe the the pass phrase to the gpg command to
Hauke Laging mailinglis...@hauke-laging.de writes:
Am Mi 18.02.2015, 21:29:40 schrieb Xavier Maillard:
Just a quick question: do I need to have both keypairs in my keyring
? I mean both my old secret key and my new secret key.
Of course. Would be strange if you could make a signature
Hi Ville,
Ville Määttä mailing-li...@asatiifm.net writes:
I happen to use Mail so for a long time I’ve been using the GPGMail
plugin with a brewed[2] upstream GnuPG. I.e. *just one of the
things in the GPG Suite*. I’ve talked about this setup before in
the thread [3]. If one doesn’t use
Peter Lebbing pe...@digitalbrains.com writes:
On 2015-02-19 18:16, Jonathan Schleifer wrote:
I also like @ to hide useless output, but is downloading *and
executing* from a remote location really something you should hide?
Especially if everything else isn't hidden?
I can understand you're
Hi Jesper,
Jesper Hess Nielsen jes...@graffen.dk writes:
gpg -u old keyid -u new keyid --clearsign keytransition.txt
keytransition.signed2
woops, forget about the ' keytransition.signed2' part. Just running
with --clearsign will give you a keytransition.txt.asc file
automatically.
Hi,
in order to announce my new GPG key I have written a key transition
document.
I am at the step where I should/must sign it with both keys (old and
new one).
I can sign (inline) my document using this:
gpg --output keytransition.signed --clearsign keytransition.txt
This works for one GPG
MFPA 2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net writes:
My preference is Inline: I want everything right there
in the message body where I can see it.
Exactly what is it you feel the over powering urge to
see?
If the message text is covered by a signature, I want to see the
signature. I
Peter Lebbing pe...@digitalbrains.com writes:
On 2015-02-13 15:07, Brian Minton wrote:
if you have a 4096 bit RSA key, please dont sign inline. The
signature block is
ridiculously long.
You'll find it is actually even an 8192 bit RSA key.
Yes sorry. I should add a smaller key for that
des-apare.cido...@autistici.org writes:
Maybe I cannot offer a big rule for THE preferred way. Jerry is
right, but maybe we HAVE to deal with recipients who have no
influence to take a mail client which is capable to handle PGP/MIME
sigbatures properly. Then it is also MY problem.
I agree.
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Hash: SHA512
Hello,
in my quest of the perfect setup, I am asking myself what is the
prefered way to sign a message: inline (like this one) or using a MIME header ?
Is there a big thumb rule to respect ?
Regards
- --
Sent with my mu4e
-BEGIN PGP
Robert J. Hansen r...@sixdemonbag.org writes:
in my quest of the perfect setup, I am asking myself what is the
prefered way to sign a message: inline (like this one) or using a
MIME header ?
Is there a big thumb rule to respect ?
https://www.gnupg.org/faq/gnupg-faq.html#use_pgpmime
THank
Jerry je...@seibercom.net writes:
On Thu, 12 Feb 2015 23:46:33 +0100, Xavier Maillard stated:
Hello,
in my quest of the perfect setup, I am asking myself what is the
prefered way to sign a message: inline (like this one) or using a MIME
header ?
Is there a big thumb rule to respect
Daniel Kahn Gillmor d...@fifthhorseman.net writes:
On Wed 2015-02-11 00:41:18 -0500, Xavier Maillard wrote:
May I ask how one would sign public keys when a master key is
stored onto an USB stick ?
I followed instructions from [1]. Now I am in the process of
announcing my key transition
flapflap flapf...@riseup.net writes:
Xavier Maillard:
Daniel Kahn Gillmor d...@fifthhorseman.net writes:
On Wed 2015-02-11 00:41:18 -0500, Xavier Maillard wrote:
May I ask how one would sign public keys when a master key is
stored onto an USB stick ?
So what ? My USB stick is formated
Hello,
May I ask how one would sign public keys when a master key is
stored onto an USB stick ?
I followed instructions from [1]. Now I am in the process of
announcing my key transition to all old signers *but*, as a last
test, I just tested public signature with my master key and this is
where
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