On Thu, 8 Apr 2010 02:31, mailinglis...@hauke-laging.de said:
# LC_ALL=C gpg --import hauke__0xECCB5814.sec.asc
gpg: key ECCB5814: already in secret keyring
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg: secret keys read: 1
gpg: secret keys unchanged: 1
This does not.
Merging secret keys is
Am Donnerstag 08 April 2010 12:03:09 schrieb Werner Koch:
Merging secret keys is not yet supported. Delete the secret keys on the
target box first.
OK... I did this:
# gpg --delete-secret-key ECCB5814
[...]
# LC_ALL=C gpg --list-secret-keys eccb5814
gpg: error reading key: No secret key
On Apr 8, 2010, at 6:28 AM, Hauke Laging wrote:
# LC_ALL=C gpg --list-secret-keys eccb5814
sec 1024D/ECCB5814 2005-09-05
uid Hauke Laging ha...@laging.de
uid Hauke Laging m...@hauke-laging.de
uid Hauke Laging mailinglis...@hauke-laging.de
Am Donnerstag 08 April 2010 12:03:09 schrieb Werner Koch:
Merging secret keys is not yet supported. Delete the secret keys on the
target box first.
I had one (ElG) subkey before I started using a smartcard. Is it impossible to
combine the old secret subkey and the smartcard keys?
It seems
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
David Shaw escribió:
On Apr 7, 2010, at 3:18 AM, Andre Amorim wrote:
What type of encryption the WikiLeaks said to have broken? AES ?
...
I do not think that this is a break of any serious crypto, though. If
someone could arrange for AES or
Faramir wrote:
David Shaw escribió:
On Apr 7, 2010, at 3:18 AM, Andre Amorim wrote:
What type of encryption the WikiLeaks said to have broken? AES ?
...
I do not think that this is a break of any serious crypto, though. If
someonecould arrange for AES or any other strong cipher to be