Re: Please get your gpg keys signed!

2010-06-25 Thread Torsten Curdt
 But checking the signatures of apache software obviously is meaningless, since
 apache developers appears to not have their keys in the web-of-trust

Many many do :)

 So please, when you've your next Hadoop / HBase / Lucene / Apache meetings,
 take your time for a keysigning party[2].

We should have done some key signing during the buzzwords conference.
For people in Berlin: I am happy to exchange keys to get them into the
web-of-trust.
Will certainly suggest something like that for our Apache Dinners.

cheers
--
Torsten


Re: Please get your gpg keys signed!

2010-06-25 Thread Patrick Hunt
Thomas, are you attending the summit? There are a number of contributor 
workshops the day after, all at (or around) the same location. If you 
feel strongly about this consider attending them, seems like great 
opportunity for a key signing party.

http://www.meetup.com/Hadoop-Contributors/calendar/13771414/
http://www.meetup.com/Hadoop-Contributors/calendar/13750403/
http://www.meetup.com/hbaseusergroup/calendar/13562846/
etc...

Here's some detail on WOT at apache:
http://www.apache.org/dev/release-signing.html#web-of-trust

Patrick

On 06/25/2010 02:29 AM, Thomas Koch wrote:

Hi,

I just wanted to package the new HBase version and since I've just recently
read about a malicious software tarball for some Linux IRC server[1], I got
back to the habbit of checking signatures. (Yes, I was lazy recently. I'm
ashamed.)

But checking the signatures of apache software obviously is meaningless, since
apache developers appears to not have their keys in the web-of-trust. From
three signature files I had laying around on my hard disc, all three keys had
zero signatures on the MIT keyserver:

30CD0996 2010-05-03 Michael Stackst...@duboce.net
68E327C1 2008-10-22 Patrick Huntph...@apache.org
FE045966 2009-10-13 Grant Ingersollgsing...@apache.org

So please, when you've your next Hadoop / HBase / Lucene / Apache meetings,
take your time for a keysigning party[2]. Or just have some snippet with your
keys fingerprint in your wallet and hand it to every other geek you meet. (And
make sure he asks you for your ID card to check your identity!) It's also nice
to have your gpg fingerprint on your business cards!

[1] http://www.sophos.com/blogs/chetw/g/2010/06/12/linux-malware-rears-ugly-
head/
[2] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_signing_party

Thank you!

Thomas Koch, http://www.koch.ro