Hi!
Hardeep Singh schrieb:
Its a tool for public key encryption using ECC rather than
prime number factoring.
AFAIK, some of the really efficient algorithms for the required math are
patented.
cu, Sven
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Hi John,
thank you for the answer how to clean my key ring:
How about doing it this way:
cp pubring.gpg pubring.tmp
gpg --import-options import-clean --import pubring.tmp
=== 1 ===
This will make a clean import to the current pubring.gpg but will this
help? Will these keys which are
Sven Radde wrote:
Hi!
Hardeep Singh schrieb:
Its a tool for public key encryption using ECC rather than
prime number factoring.
AFAIK, some of the really efficient algorithms for the required math are
patented.
in that case these patents are only valid inside the US, since no EU
country
Seeing a thread about smart-cards finally got me to ask a couple of
questions
In a general question, what are the main reasons I would want to buy one?
Are there decent Smart-Cards for Apple MacBooks ?
thank you
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Robert D. wrote:
In a general question, what are the main reasons I would want to buy one?
Legal or employment reasons. Some people have smart card usage mandated
to them. These people tend to be the primary users.
Some people believe storing private keys on smart cards leads to better
bjr149 wrote:
C:\GNU\GnuPGgpg --export key name C:\GNU\GnuPG\public.key
By default, GnuPG will export keys in binary format. This is more
space-efficient, but is not readable to humans. (I don't think that's a
big loss, given that the human-readable version isn't all that readable
to humans,
On Tue, 30 Oct 2007 15:40, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Note that it's --armor --export, not --export --armor. The former
will work fine. The latter will try to export a key named --armor,
That is not correct. The ordering of options and commands does not
matter. However mixing arguments (key
Hi,
In the pursuit of complicating my life with some fun, I have installed
Linux Ubuntu 7.04 under Parallels 3.0 Mac build 5160 (in addition to
Windows XP Pro). The current release of Ubuntu, 7.10 is not [yet]
digested by Parallels, but eventually it will.
Ubuntu 7.04 distribution came with
Charly Avital wrote:
My question, please help: where, how can I find and open, actually open
and edit as required, gpg.conf? A ls search in .gnupg lists 'options'.
Dunno what that's doing there. You're right, it should be gpg.conf.
The good news is most of your OS X Terminal.app skills will
Hi,
In the pursuit of complicating my life with some fun, I have installed
Linux Ubuntu 7.04 under Parallels 3.0 Mac build 5160 (in addition to
Windows XP Pro). The current release of Ubuntu, 7.10 is not [yet]
digested by Parallels, but eventually it will.
Ubuntu 7.04 distribution came with
Charly Avital wrote:
My question, please help: where, how can I find and open, actually open
and edit as required, gpg.conf?
You have to create the file yourself and place it in ~/.gnupg.
Robert suggested gedit, but if you have KDE (you mentioned that you
installed kgpg), you can use Kate or
Charly Avital wrote:
My question, please help: where, how can I find and open, actually
open and edit as required, gpg.conf? A ls search in .gnupg lists
'options'. I remember that gnupg.options was the ancestor of
gpg.conf (probably before gnupg 1.2.*).
Just rename (mv) options to gpg.conf.
What causes your key-ring to become dirty or fragmented?
Michael wrote:
I like to clean my key ring automatically. I have put the attached
lines
together to do this. But something is wrong, the script shows the
data
which need to be changed but the update is not saved. Experts, what
is
Atom,
Going through the list archives, I came across a few of your postings
that seem to indicate that you have more insight into the way subkey
self-signatures are generated than what I can gather from the RFC.
Arguably, it's one of the most confusing sections...
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