On Thu, 24 May 2012 19:09, gonzale...@hildebrando.com said:
but when I use this, the gpg send me a message:
I can't see that but I guess that you want to use this command line:
gpg --armor --output enc.txt --encrypt --recipient secur...@gooddata.com
--trust-model always --batch --yes
On Thu, 24 May 2012 02:22, r...@sixdemonbag.org said:
The final version that gets submitted to Werner will by necessity be
plain text, and that will probably get downshifted into dumb typewriter
Keep those quotes. I like UTF-8 and it is always easier to replace them
by ticks and backticks
On 25-05-2012 4:20, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
Looking over the PGP product offerings after their acquisition by
Symantec, it seems they have dropped support for 2048- and 3072-bit DSA.
This decision makes no sense to me, and is sufficiently weird that I
wonder if the marketing copy is horribly
---re #5: Is RSA-2048 really enough?
***start 2nd sentence : And other organizations to whom encryption
is important (such as RSA...*** [The world changes, and maybe
an explicit endorsement might not be so appropriate tomorrow,
but embarassing or similar to change then. Just mentioning
On 5/25/12 6:41 AM, Nicholas Cole wrote:
***In terms of current scientific understandings, the symmetric
ciphers used in GnuPG are utterly***
The symmetric ciphers used in GnuPG are utterly immune to
brute forcing. The Second Law of Thermodynamics places strict
I'm comfortable with things as
On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 04:55:59PM +0100, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
- From tests carried out - Mandrava Linux was ok. I suspect that other Linux
distros have no
real problems - just because your works - does not mean that every other
Linux distro works.
However: because it works on my system,
On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 08:27:59PM +0100, michael crane wrote:
mwood@mhw ~ $ dir /usr/bin/gpg*
Sorry, that's lingering evidence of my VMS habits:
mwood@mhw ~ $ alias dir
alias dir='ls -l'
--
Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer mw...@iupui.edu
Asking whether markets are efficient is like
On Friday 25 of May 2012 11:22:45 Johan Wevers wrote:
On 25-05-2012 4:20, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
product they offer:
* Diffie-Hellman
* DSA (1024-bit keys only)
* RSA (up to 4096-bit keys)
Seems they want to push everyone to RSA. I wonder why? The patent issue
is over so
On 5/25/12 8:35 AM, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
Dan Boneh showed breaking RSA without factoring anything was
probably possible, but it was a nonconstructive demonstration -- we have
no idea where to begin.
Just realized the phrase nonconstructive may need to be explained.
The best way to do it is
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 10:44:40AM +0200, Werner Koch wrote:
On Thu, 24 May 2012 02:22, r...@sixdemonbag.org said:
The final version that gets submitted to Werner will by necessity be
plain text, and that will probably get downshifted into dumb typewriter
Keep those quotes. I like UTF-8
Hi,
Couple quick questions (and probably a FAQ):
1. Attempting to decrypt a file that was sent to me by someone else,
I get this message:
gpg: decryption failed: secret key not available
Could that mean the file was not encrypted with my public key?
2. Assuming the above it
Robert J. Hansen rjh at sixdemonbag.org wrote on
Fri May 25 15:24:32 CEST 2012 :
In reality, Dan Boneh is a very nice guy, quite reasonable, and
nothing at all like I'm portraying him here.
He gives a free online crypto course at Stanford
https://www.coursera.org/#course/crypto
The
There's a slight confusion in these answers that I think it would be
really helpful to address in an FAQ.
Yes, there is. Unfortunately, the answer is kind of messy.
[ snip ]
Thank you for a really good and useful answer. I hope some of that
can make it into the FAQ.
If I understand you
Thanks (and Hauke as well). This just confirms my suspicion.
I don't get as much info returned as you guys but that's probably because I
Have an old gpg version on my system (1.4.11):
bd9439@dspsas01 $ gpg --list-packets optout_050912.zip.gpg
gpg: WARNING: using insecure memory!
gpg: please
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
On 24.05.2012 20:09, Jose Juan Gonzalez wrote:
Hi,
Good morning I try to encrypt a file ,similar to the step 3 on this
page:
http://developer.gooddata.com/docs/sso
with the next instruction:
gpg --armor --output enc.txt --encrypt
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
On 25.05.2012 16:39, DUELL, BOB wrote:
Hi,
Couple quick questions (and probably a FAQ):
1. Attempting to decrypt a file that was sent to me by someone
else, I get this message:
gpg: decryption failed: secret key not available
On Fri, 25 May 2012 17:25, bd9...@att.com said:
I don't get as much info returned as you guys but that's probably because I
Have an old gpg version on my system (1.4.11):
That is not very old. 1.4 is fully maintained in addition to 2.x.
gpg: encrypted with ELG-E key, ID 1B8A6A37
gpg:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 25/05/12 14:03, Mark H. Wood wrote:
On Thu, May 24, 2012 at 04:55:59PM +0100, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
- From tests carried out - Mandrava Linux was ok. I suspect that other Linux
distros have no
real problems - just because your works - does
On Fri, 25 May 2012 15:31, mw...@iupui.edu said:
And life is too short to go trawling the Internet for X Compose
sequences. If I could find a comprehensive table I'd probably use
Meanwhile I set my keyboard to:
| mod3+ | normal | shift |
|---++|
| P | „ |
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On 5/25/12 1:47 PM, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
For example opensuse - all versions tested:
(1) When you open the address book in TB select an address right
mouse click you get an option to create a per-recipient rule for
that person.
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 08:07:54PM +0100, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
Openpgp/enigmail does not support gpg2 unless one has installed gpg
1.4.11 - but I no longer trust Openpgp/enigmail to do anything.
That's unfortunate. While I'm mostly a Mutt user these days, I have Debian
Icedove installed with
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 25/05/12 21:47, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
On 5/25/12 1:47 PM, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
For example opensuse - all versions tested:
(1) When you open the address book in TB select an address right
mouse click you get an option to create a
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 25/05/12 23:01, Aaron Toponce wrote:
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 08:07:54PM +0100, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
Openpgp/enigmail does not support gpg2 unless one has installed gpg
1.4.11 - but I no longer trust Openpgp/enigmail to do anything.
That's
On Thu, 24 May 2012, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
On 5/24/12 7:56 PM, reynt0 wrote:
. . .
The idea is just to maximize usability to maximum audience,
. . .
Maximum audience is not the same as maximum usability. The two are
different properties. When it comes to the written word, ease of
On Fri, May 25, 2012 at 09:24:32AM -0400, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
...snip..
At this point you look skywards and scream, GET ME OUT OF THIS
METAPHOR! I get it already! A nonconstructive proof doesn't tell us
anything about /what/ or /why/ or /how/, it just says that
On 05/25/2012 06:43 PM, da...@gbenet.com wrote:
I gave you an example which was Seahorse - clearly you failed to
read.
You did not specify which distro was refusing to give the source for
Seahorse. I've found it in the repositories for Ubuntu, Debian and Fedora.
I have set out quite clearly
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