I've recently bought a SCR335 card reader and gnupg smartcard. I'm
having difficulties getting the card reader working on my Debian 4.0
system with gnupg 1.4.6
I've followed the instructions at
http://www.gnupg.org/(en)/howtos/card-howto/en/smartcard-howto.html but
running --card-status gives the
Andrew Berg wrote:
In instances where GPG is used on a portable drive and used on
different machines, it is much better to have gpg.conf read from the
same directory as GPG rather than read from %appdata%\gnupg or
~/.gnupg. Just to have it check the same directory, then
%appdata%\gnupg or
Please ignore my last message. Some other software was stealing away the
reader :-) It's now working fine.
James
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Gnupg-users
Zeljko Vrba [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Jim Berland [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
There are other flaws in the computer system that would have
to be addressed (a secretary has root access to the server to
let her start the daily backup process after work), but I'm
not in charge of that.
Huh?
Philipp Gühring wrote:
Does anyone know of software available to make an old PC into something
like a hardware security module.
Yes, I developed exactly such software.
Great. What is it called? Is it available?
It´s called CommModule. It isn´t publically available yet, but it could be
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Peter S. May wrote:
Andrew Berg wrote:
In instances where GPG is used on a portable drive and used on
different machines, it is much better to have gpg.conf read from the
same directory as GPG rather than read from %appdata%\gnupg or
Andrew Berg wrote:
Peter S. May wrote:
Andrew Berg wrote:
In instances where GPG is used on a portable drive and used on
different machines, it is much better to have gpg.conf read from the
same directory as GPG rather than read from %appdata%\gnupg or
~/.gnupg. Just to have it check the