On Wednesday 28 January 2004 04:03, Thomas T. Veldhouse wrote:

> All people on these lists that use GPG ... please, a heads up!  If
> you are going to use PGP or GnuPG to sign your email messages, it
> does absolutely no good for anybody, and indeed, wastes some
> bandwidth, if you do supply a public key to the keyservers.  Please,
> post your public keys or quit signing your emails.  All but one email
> tonight from the Gentoo lists, that were signed, had no public keys
> listed at the keyservers.

Hmm, then it must be one of my mails, because my key is already on
the keyserver pgp.mit.edu :)

I've checked all mails posted on this list since 27.01.04 00:00 and
this is the result:

Keys found (on pgp.mit.edu):

[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Andrew Farmer)
Ciaran McCreesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Drake Wyrm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Gregory Staggel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
James Lee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Jason Stubbs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Matthew Kennedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Mauro Arnoldi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Moshe Kaminsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Norberto Bensa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Keys NOT found (on pgp.mit.edu):

Jakub Krajcovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Rainer Sigwald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
"Thomas T. Veldhouse" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   !!


(comment from gpg.conf):
# Most users just set the name and type of their preferred keyserver.
# Most servers do synchronize with each other and DNS round-robin may
# give you a quasi-random server each time.

I've did so and using pgp.mit.edu to receive keys. But I can't find
_your_ key there.

> So, if you are going to sign your messages posted into a public forum
> like this one, please, post your public keys to a keyserver like
> belgium.keyserver.net.

That's right. I hate it too, when I have to wait several seconds on every
mail posted without a available key.

cu

lukas

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