A wishes to send message to B.
A encrypts message using B's key. Opens encrypted message and corrupts
the file by altering one or more characters/adding redundant lines of
code, e.g. changes case of first occurrence of 'T' in the code. Saves
file and sends to B.
B will get an error message when t
On Sun, Jun 11, 2006 at 09:46:37PM +0100, Jason Wittlin-Cohen wrote:
> I was playing around with the gnupg command line options and I noticed
> that whenever I signed or encrypted and signed a file, GPG would use
> SHA1 rather than SHA256, which is the preferred digest for my primary key.
>
> I co
I was playing around with the gnupg command line options and I noticed
that whenever I signed or encrypted and signed a file, GPG would use
SHA1 rather than SHA256, which is the preferred digest for my primary key.
I confirmed that SHA256 was the preferred digest by using "gpg
--edit-key 2228BC8F"
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
I posted this on the Thunderbird Forums. I thought that it might have
something to do with Enigmail/GnuGP... I thought I might get an
opinion from another perspective. What do you guys think?
> Sometimes (maybe 2/5 times) Thunderbird will crash wh
Hello,
I'd like to export all public keys in my keyring to seperate ASCII-armored
files, using the name from the user ID as the filname, and adding ".asc"
as the extension. If a key has multiple user IDs, then the name from the
newest one should be used. Is there a shell script that can do this?
Can I say about gnupg that is modular? If yes, does exist a map of the
modules?
Thanks in advance Martin
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