On 09.10.2012 01:27:26, Albrecht Dreß wrote:
Am 05.10.12 22:20 schrieb(en) Ildar Mulyukov:I started to look at this part and it has a little glitch: it displays 16-hexdigit Key fingerprint. But the useful part is actually digits 9 to 16 (the 8 digits that user sees in seahorse or even in `gpg2 --search-keys` output).Wrong. You can use either the key id or the key fingerprint as arg for '--search-keys' and friends. See 'man gpg' for details.
Albrecht, I didn't mean that Balsa's Key fingerprint is wrong, I mean that Balsa's presentation of it is hostile. Compare this:
1. cmd line
$ gpg2 --search-keys [email protected] | grep DSA
gpg: поиск "[email protected]" на hkp сервере
subkeys.pgp.net
Keys 1-1 of 1 for "[email protected]". 1024 bit DSA
key D027FFD1, создан: 2002-04-15
2. Thunderbird: see a shot 2. seahorse: see a shot 3. Balsa: see a shotIf a user wants to verify the fingerprint by looking at it, then it is easy with Seahorse, TB and even with cmdline gpg, but not with Balsa.
If I am wrong and the Key fingerprint is shown for different purposes, then please clarify, because, you know, I am still new in Mail encryption/verification software.
That's what I mean. Regards, -- Ildar Mulyukov, free SW designer/programmer ================================================ email: [email protected] blog: http://johan-notes.blogspot.com/ ALT Linux Sisyphus ================================================
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