Tom, The 'owner' of the data is indeed the user. if they become incapacitated, or whatever, then there is no loss to anyone else.
Chip On Mon, 1 Apr 2019 06:38:35 -0700, Tom Benedict wrote: > Chip, > > Just checking to confirm that the ultimate ‘owner’ of the data is > indeed the individual user and if they are incapacitated or lose > their key that is OK and ’their’ data is inaccessible forever. Or is > there a need for a ‘master’ key? > > Tom Benedict > >> On Mar 31, 2019, at 21:54, Chip Scheide via 4D_Tech >> <4d_tech@lists.4d.com> wrote: >> >> Kirk, Bruno, >> It seems as if both of you use 1 single key pair to encrypt ALL the >> secure data. >> In my situation I am creating a key pair for each user, then >> encrypting that user's secure data with their own key. >> this way if one user accidentally, or intensionally gains access to >> other users secure data they can not actually unencrypted it, as >> their key will not give them functional access. >> >> I was planning on keeping the keys in the data file... but I can see >> that might be an issue. >> Any other ideas on where/how to keep the keys, given the above? >> >> Chip >> > > --------------- Gas is for washing parts Alcohol is for drinkin' Nitromethane is for racing ********************************************************************** 4D Internet Users Group (4D iNUG) Archive: http://lists.4d.com/archives.html Options: https://lists.4d.com/mailman/options/4d_tech Unsub: mailto:4d_tech-unsubscr...@lists.4d.com **********************************************************************