Regrettably I must also bow out - family emergency. Let’s try next meeting.
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 17:14 Antonio Sun via talk wrote:
> Sorry, I noticed this message just now. -- I was the one who expressed
> the interest of getting the key signed before.
>
> So *bring paper
Sorry, I noticed this message just now. -- I was the one who expressed the
interest of getting the key signed before.
So *bring paper copies **of our signatures* to enable exchange is the only
thing need to get my key signed? -- I'm asking because if I come to
today's meeting, I have to get back
On 2018-03-11 03:45 PM, Bob Jonkman via talk wrote:
> I do recommend that the keymaster for a keysigning event generates a
> key specifically for that event.
We tried a formal keysigning party at GTALUG once. It was a lot of work
and I think we extended the Web of Trust by four people.
The WoT
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Sergio wrote:
> and a government piece of identification (if you can bring two
> pieces, even better).
Let me post my usual diatribe against using third-party ID for
keysigning...
Signing a GnuPG/PGP key is an indication that the signer believes
Hi Rouben,
I am also looking for someone to sign my key, and I had a brief exchange on
this topic at the IRC channel, #torontocrypto @ irc.oftc.net yesterday.
Next week is the March break week, I will be travelling and for this reason
I won't be able to attend the GTALUG meeting next Tuesday. I
On Friday, March 09 2018, Rouben via talk wrote:
> I’m a newbie to this list. The name is Rouben Tchakhmakhtchian; I’ve been a
> Linux user since about 1998 (dabbled with it a bit before that). I’m
> currently working at UofT in IT, and am still a die-hard open source
> enthusiast.
>
> I was
On 9 March 2018 at 20:56, Rouben via talk wrote:
> Hello everyone!
>
> I’m a newbie to this list. The name is Rouben Tchakhmakhtchian; I’ve been a
> Linux user since about 1998 (dabbled with it a bit before that). I’m
> currently working at UofT in IT, and am still a die-hard
Hello everyone!
I’m a newbie to this list. The name is Rouben Tchakhmakhtchian; I’ve been a
Linux user since about 1998 (dabbled with it a bit before that). I’m
currently working at UofT in IT, and am still a die-hard open source
enthusiast.
I was wondering, does the GTALUG community still