On Wednesday, April 18 2018, Antonio Sun via talk wrote: > So I attend the Key Signing party, exchanged my signatures, and even get > emails telling me that my key is signed. > > I'm now a bit lost on what shall I do next, and trying to google for the > answer didn't help much either.
Hey Antonio, Basically, the person who signed your key (assuming that he followed the good practices) will have your key e-mailed to you in the ASCII armored format. You will need to save this file on your computer, import it using: gpg2 --import FILE and then verify that the new signature(s) are OK, using the "--list-signatures" option. After you've verified that everything is OK, you will then need to upload your key to a keyserver: gpg2 --send-key YOUR_KEY_ID --keyserver hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net And that's basically it. I strongly suggest you read about OpenGPG best practices here: <https://riseup.net/en/security/message-security/openpgp/best-practices> It's important to read and understand them; your key will be used to identify you, so you need to keep it in good shape. By the way, I'm still waiting for your encrypted e-mail regarding the problem with your key IDs. Thanks, -- Sergio GPG key ID: 237A 54B1 0287 28BF 00EF 31F4 D0EB 7628 65FC 5E36 Please send encrypted e-mail if possible http://sergiodj.net/ --- Talk Mailing List [email protected] https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
