On Mon, 09 Feb 2015 13:28:03 -0800, brettm wrote:
On Mon, 9 Feb 2015 12:02:06 +
skin...@britvault.co.uk (Craig Skinner) wrote:
|
| Neither can Goatmail, Snotmail, NSA, govt agencies, etc.
|
As far as we know, NSA etc cannot read other people's PGP encrypted
mail. I think it is important
On Mon, 9 Feb 2015 12:02:06 +
skin...@britvault.co.uk (Craig Skinner) wrote:
|
| Neither can Goatmail, Snotmail, NSA, govt agencies, etc.
|
As far as we know, NSA etc cannot read other people's PGP encrypted mail. I
think it is important to remember (and state clearly in these type of
dis
On Mon, Feb 09, 2015 at 12:02:06PM +, Craig Skinner wrote:
> On 2015-02-09 Mon 11:56 AM |, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> > >
> > > Because they are not an SMTP (*simple* mail transfer protocol) problem,
> > > they are a MUA & user training issues.
> > >
> >
> > Yes, unfortunately you can't always
On 2015-02-09 Mon 11:56 AM |, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> >
> > Because they are not an SMTP (*simple* mail transfer protocol) problem,
> > they are a MUA & user training issues.
> >
>
> Yes, unfortunately you can't always use PGP because not everyone does.
>
A user training issue, not a technical
On Mon, Feb 09, 2015 at 10:49:36AM +, Craig Skinner wrote:
> On 2015-02-08 Sun 10:56 AM |, Gilles Chehade wrote:
> >
> > 1- you need the queue to be encrypted.
> > 2- you need mails delivered to the users to be encrypted.
>
> The SENDER encrypts their message in their MUA, _before_ sending.
>
On 2015-02-08 Sun 10:56 AM |, Gilles Chehade wrote:
>
> 1- you need the queue to be encrypted.
> 2- you need mails delivered to the users to be encrypted.
The SENDER encrypts their message in their MUA, _before_ sending.
> 3- you need mails to be decrypted when a user retrieves them.
The recipi