| From: Giles Orr <[email protected]>

| So I see that agent forwarding might be unwise if you don't trust the
| administrator or the machine is compromised (and yes, you can never be
| sure a machine is secure), but if you're worried about the security of
| the remote host, storing private keys on it and reauthenticating seems
| worse.  Am I missing something?

You could have a more limited identity on C for which you are willing
to disclose enough on B so that it can authenticate with C.

Your Identity on A is all powerful.  You can SSH to B, proving you
have this identity.

You can ssh from B to C with a weaker identity.  But, of course, the
private key then needs to be on B (or you use a password, not really better).

I don't recommend it, I just note it.
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