On Tue, 20 Sep 2011 22:48, r...@sixdemonbag.org said:
If I determine that my work PC and my home PC are both trusted systems,
and I have a single USB stick containing my GnuPG installation and
keyrings that I want to use on both, then I don't see the risk so long
as that USB stick is never
I have GPG Tools 20110711 installed on a MacAir running Snow Leopard.
If I right click an encrypted file I get a services menu item Open PGP:
Decrypt. Selecting that will decrypt the file properly. My problem is
this. Once that file is decrypted I can click on any file that was
encrypted
Hi there!
On Tue, 20 Sep 2011 22:04:53 +0200, Peter Pentchev wrote:
On Tue, Sep 20, 2011 at 06:31:44PM +0200, Luca Capello wrote:
Please Cc: me, I am not subscribed to the list.
Still valid.
While I know that my email was accepted, I have not received any
error/moderation message:
=
I've released version 0.3 of my tool gpgkeymgr today.
With gpgkeymgr you can clean up and manage your GnuPGP-keyring, by
removing old and unnecessary keys.
There haven't been any new bigger features, but I have an French
translation (thanks to jbar), German translation of program and manpage,
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: RIPEMD160
Hi,
Is there a way to require the password every time I try and decrypt a
file. The current situation presents a security risk as opening one file
essentially unlocks all files encrypted with the same key.
Caching in gpg-agent is
On Wed, 21 Sep 2011 10:40, l...@pca.it said:
the log above. The problem is that there is no sign of my email above,
not even the in-moderation notification. I will try to re-send it...
Sending such notification back to the spammers is not a good idea. You
either have to wait - or better -
Have been playing with gpg4win, and installed everything according
to the defaults.
Cannot get Kleopatra or GPA to add a subkey,
but can easily do it from the commandline.
-
C:\PROGRA~1\GNU\GNUPGgpg --edit-key 1
gpg (GnuPG) 2.0.17; Copyright (C) 2011 Free Software Foundation,
Inc.
ved...@nym.hush.com wrote:
BTW,
There is a unique advantage to running gnupg from cygwin on
windows, as it's the only way to make use of unix-like commands,
(cat, grep, printf, etc.) and pipe them to and from gnupg.
ONLY? How much effort did you expend looking?
The MinGW compiler folks
On 9/21/2011 11:44 PM, John Clizbe wrote:
ONLY? How much effort did you expend looking?
In addition to John's offerings, don't forget http://gnuwin32.sf.net.
Most of the GNU tools exist in native Win32 builds. Some of them are a
bit old (e.g., their flex is 2.5.4a, current is 2.5.34, their gawk