On Mon, 8 Mar 2010 13:22, power...@powerman.name said:
I don't think so. Every project encrypt it backups with different
passwords (needed for security), and right now I can keep just several
dozens of passwords, but with public keys I'll need to keep several dozens
of .gnupg directories
On Thu, 18 Feb 2010 18:20, carlo.bra...@libero.it said:
I tried to compile gnupg-2.0.15rc1 under mingw+msys.
As you know we only support cross-building from a Unix platform.
Everything worked fine except the compilation of scd/ccid-driver.c
Well, the internal ccid-driver does not work wth
Hello!
We are pleased to announce the availability of a new stable GnuPG-2
release: Version 2.0.15.
The GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) is GNU's tool for secure communication
and data storage. It can be used to encrypt data, create digital
signatures, help authenticating using Secure Shell and to
Hi!
To move forward with the migration to libassuan 2.0, I did a release
candidate for Dirmngr:
ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/dirmngr/dirmngr-1.1.0rc1.tar.bz2 (544k)
ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/alpha/dirmngr/dirmngr-1.1.0rc1.tar.bz2.sig
Changes are:
* Fixed a resource problem with
Folks
I'm at the next step of signing the keys and creating the trust model. I've
signed 3 keys and set the trust. When I list the keys, I get the following:
[...@app1 ~]$ gpg --list-keys
gpg: checking the trustdb
gpg: 3 marginal(s) needed, 1 complete(s) needed, PGP trust model
gpg: depth: 0
Folks
A quick question about signing the imported PGP public keys. One of the
options under gpg --edit-key is enable. Do I need to enable the key or is that
the default?
Thanks for your help.
Cathy
---
Cathy L. Smith
IT Engineer
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Phone: 509.375.2687