On 12/12/2018 9:01 PM, Arthur Ulfeldt wrote: > Yes! All the encryption happens on your computer (and or your phone) and > you have complete control of the process.
True for the computer, by nature phone are not secure. > The flip side of this is you are responsible for the whole process. There > are *many* ways to go about this for different > people in different situations. Here is just one option. > > * make yourself a key using gpg > * put that key on the devices you want to use (I use a yubikey for this, > and that costs $ which is totally optional) > * setup your email, gpg4win is one popular option: > https://www.gpg4win.org/about.html Thunderbird with enigmail. Obviously, the recipient would need to use gpg to be able to decrypt. > * set it up on your phone. openkeychain is popular on android and has been > solid for me for years. I recommend to sign only e-mails using your phone. That is one signing key per device and one encryption key on a computer. > * setup facebook to send you encrypted notifications (optional and purely > for fun) Yes, Facebook rings more with security breach. > * get comfortable with this process for a while then explore more complex > and or customized options. > TB and enigmail are a good place to start on Windows or Linux for that matter. -- John Doe _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users