Hello Jerry.
Am Samstag, den 19.01.2019, 07:31 -0500 schrieb Jerry:
> Probably a dumb question, but I thought I would ask regardless.
>
> I created a key pair using my name and email address. I then added a
> new id to the key with the same name but a different email address.
> Now, when I send
Hello.
Am Donnerstag, den 10.01.2019, 16:23 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> > It's part of GNU philosophy to not implement unnecessary
> > hard limits in software but one good reason to impose limits
> > is to prevent denial of service conditions.
> What i really don't get with this DoS stuff is
Hello Stefan.
Am Mittwoch, den 09.01.2019, 22:50 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> On Wed, 09 Jan 2019 22:25:21 +0100,
> dirk.gottschalk1...@googlemail.com wrote:
>
> Hi Dirk,
>
> > But, this is more a Problem of SKS. When SKS accepts such keys,
> > it's
> > not GPG's fault.
> Forget SKS for a
Hi Stefan.
Am Mittwoch, den 09.01.2019, 18:06 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> On Tue, 8 Jan 2019 20:16:59 +0100, Stefan Claas wrote:
[...]
> The provided Chief Wiggum image contains a 2 seconds .mp4 movie
> clip. Pretty awesome imho! So this means that one can hide in a PGP
> key movies and other
Hello.
Am Dienstag, den 08.01.2019, 20:16 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> Yes, agreed! However, as it currently is there is no need for bad
> actors because people have plenty of image space in a key.
Uh, I think you have found a new place where the guys can hide their
porn collections so there
Hi.
What are you trying to do?
Do you just want to transfer you public key via email or anything like
that?
Then try:
gpg2 -a --eyport > filename.asc
This gives you an ascii armored key that you can transfer in any way
you want.
Regards,
Dirk
Am Sonntag, den 14.01.2018, 22:57 +