On 10/24/2010 1:43 PM, James wrote: > Mark Hansen wrote: >> On 10/23/2010 6:24 PM, James wrote: >> >>> I have been using email certificates for years. The only time I had >>> email certificate problems is when I started using SeaMonkey. >>> >> Have you considered using Enigmail? To be honest, I didn't even know >> SeaMonkey had a built-in way to send/receive encrypted e-mail messages. >> >> Enigmail provides this and has been working for me for years. >> > I have been looking at the documentation and found no reference to how > the other user would be able to use anything I sent to them encrypted. > Does each party need the same program? If so, then this application will > be severely limited as most of my correspondents that use certificate > encryption use Outlook, Outlook Express, or some other email client > program. My problem is with the Thunderbird user. > > I will continue to look into this and I thank you for your suggestion.
>From what I understand, the encrypted e-mail message is done in an industry-standard way, so anyone (with the correct public pgp key) should be able to read it. However, I don't know for sure. You might want to check with the author's site. I'm sure he has an FAQ or is willing to answer questions, etc. Good luck. _______________________________________________ support-seamonkey mailing list [email protected] https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/support-seamonkey

