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Ludwig Hügelschäfer escribió:
Hello,
the last weeks, when importing public keys I sometimes get:
Öffentlicher Schlüssel %s ist %lu Sekunden jünger als die Unterschrift
in english:
public key %s is %lu second newer than the signature
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I have an issue with signing a key with an exportable key (I got that
fix) but I keep getting a message when I try to send the key back to
the server with my signature. http://wwwkeys.pgp.net:11371: Could not
connect to the host. This is from gpg4win
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I have a question about David Ross's instructions for revoking old
keys that you no longer have access to per instructions on his website
( http://www.rossde.com/PGP/pgp_keyserv.html#noremove ). Do I create a
key just for revoking all old keys and
On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 10:53, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
fix) but I keep getting a message when I try to send the key back to
the server with my signature. http://wwwkeys.pgp.net:11371: Could not
That URL is a collection of keyservers; you use a random one and thus
you can't know whether this is a
Hi.
I already send this question to gnupg-devel... which might not be the
right place because I didn't get an answer there :-) May be someone from
gnupg-users might help me with this issue.
With gpg-1.4.9 I used the passphrase_cb() from gpgme to handle
passphrases. What is the recommended
On Aug 11, 2008, at 5:47 AM, Allen Schultz wrote:
I have a question about David Ross's instructions for revoking old
keys that you no longer have access to per instructions on his website
( http://www.rossde.com/PGP/pgp_keyserv.html#noremove ). Do I create a
key just for revoking all old keys
On Sun, 10 Aug 2008, Andrew Berg wrote:
. . .
I've gotten into the habit of typing my passwords very quickly with very
little finger movement in order to make it difficult for anyone looking
over my shoulder to figure them out.
Or anyone sitting to the side of you two seats away,
who is doing
On Monday 11 August 2008, reynt0 wrote:
On Sun, 10 Aug 2008, Andrew Berg wrote:
. . .
I've gotten into the habit of typing my passwords very quickly with
very little finger movement in order to make it difficult for
anyone looking over my shoulder to figure them out.
Or anyone sitting
Werner Koch wrote:
On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 12:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
passphrases. What is the recommended way to handle the passphrase with
gpgme and gpg2? Since I'm building a server application I can not use
You need to use gpg-preset-passphrase.
I recently tested that I found that there
On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 12:43, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
passphrases. What is the recommended way to handle the passphrase with
gpgme and gpg2? Since I'm building a server application I can not use
You need to use gpg-preset-passphrase.
I recently tested that I found that there is a buglet in gpg
On Mon, 11 Aug 2008 18:31, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Is there a timeframe when this will be fixed? And I still don't see
We have no need to fix that problem. Thus it takes until all higher
priority jobs are finished.
how to uses the preset-passphrase with gpgme?
You can't. In most cases
Hi all,
http://www.etokenonlinux.org/et/HowTos/eToken_and_GPG
[s]
--
Andre Amorim
GnuPG KEY: 2048R/3E10FF47
Download:
http://pgp.zdv.uni-mainz.de:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7C3B77763E10FF47
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Werner Koch wrote:
A suggest to use hkp://keys.gnupg.net which directs only to keyservers
known to work. All these keyservers are syncronized, so it does in
practice not matter which one you use.
Or hkp://pool.sks-keyservers.net which is updated twice per day to only include
online and
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