Thanks for the replies, everyone. So what about a solution like Yubikey NEO? I read on their site that you can generate a keypair and put it on the yubikey. But what I'm a little confused about is, once you have the public and private key on the card, how do you use it to encrypt/sign/decrypt things? Excuse my lack of knowledge on this. It all seems pretty cool, and I'm just trying to wrap my head around it.
On Mon, Feb 29, 2016 at 8:52 AM, Andrew Gallagher <andr...@andrewg.com> wrote: > On 29/02/16 15:31, Martin Ilchev wrote: > > > > For Windows I installed gpg4win and migrated my linux gpg.conf and keys > > over and it just worked. Also in windows if you want to use putty with a > > smart card you will need a patched putty agent. You can get one from > > here http://smartcard-auth.de/ssh-en.html. It is free to use with > > OpenPGP Smartcards from kernel concepts so a win-win :). > > Unfortunately the developer of that pageant replacement distributes > unsigned binary blobs over plain HTTP. The Windows build of GnuPG 2.1 on > the other hand (linked from the official gnupg site) has a gpg-agent > that can run as a pageant replacement for putty (same idea as ssh-agent > replacement). You don't get all the graphical tools that come with > GPG4Win, but it's a safer (and more future-proof) solution IMO. > > A > > > _______________________________________________ > Gnupg-users mailing list > Gnupg-users@gnupg.org > http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users > > -- Josh Terrill // developer 209-676-7334
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