Mark Hansen wrote:
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.
You make it seem as if you never sent or received an encrypted email
using your method. If you had, you would know what each participant is
required to have. Still, when I have time, I will continue to research
Enigmail. So far it seems it will only work with Mozilla email client
programs.
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