>> "David" == David Shaw writes:
>>
>> However it seems that the application expects for some reason another a
>> password during the import process.
> Interesting. I wonder why it does that - perhaps it stores the key
> unencrypted internally? What happens if you provide your r
On Jan 27, 2014, at 3:26 PM, Uwe Brauer wrote:
>>> "David" == David Shaw writes:
>
>> On Jan 27, 2014, at 3:02 PM, Uwe Brauer wrote:
>>> Hello
>>>
>>> I just tried out iPGmail a app for the iPhone which supports
>>> pgp. However I want to import my private key and here the trouble
>>> starts.
>> "David" == David Shaw writes:
> On Jan 27, 2014, at 3:02 PM, Uwe Brauer wrote:
>> Hello
>>
>> I just tried out iPGmail a app for the iPhone which supports
>> pgp. However I want to import my private key and here the trouble
>> starts. For some reason iPGmail only supports p
On Jan 27, 2014, at 3:02 PM, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> Hello
>
> I just tried out iPGmail a app for the iPhone which supports
> pgp. However I want to import my private key and here the trouble
> starts. For some reason iPGmail only supports private keys in armor
> format which are password protected.
Hello
I just tried out iPGmail a app for the iPhone which supports
pgp. However I want to import my private key and here the trouble
starts. For some reason iPGmail only supports private keys in armor
format which are password protected.
But
gpg --export-secret-keys --passphrase hallo --armor >