On Fri, 16 Nov 2018 10:32:36 +0100, Wiktor Kwapisiewicz wrote:
Hi Wiktor,
> As for the sigs, sig1 are ignored in GnuPG by default, everything
> else has the same value. So if Stefan's friends trust his key fully,
> all keys he's signed will be equally valid.
I like again to make it clear that pe
On Sun, 18 Nov 2018 18:30:00 +, df. wrote:
> I signed up to ProtonMail in March '14 but did not actually get the
> account until December '14. That's 9 months later.
>
> I have one pair of keys generated (for both .ch and .com), generated
> on the day I setup the account, which for me was on
Stefan Claas:
> I ask because it puzzles me a bit when i discovered a while
> ago that i have now 2 public keys on my account, which
> are created at a later date, then when i signed up to the
> service, which then created the key pair upon sign-up.
>
> Therefore i like to know if users can show m
On Sun, 18 Nov 2018 18:15:01 +0100, Stefan Claas wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2018 17:57:47 +0100, Dirk Gottschalk wrote:
>
> Hi Dirk,
>
> > Am Sonntag, den 18.11.2018, 17:41 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > while i do respect the privacy of people, i was wondering,
> > > since i
On Sun, 18 Nov 2018 17:54:26 +0100, Juergen BRUCKNER wrote:
Hi Juergen,
> the ex- and import of the keys at commandline in terminal works fine.
>
> But I wanted to make screenshots of the process for a presentation i
> would use for a training of "newbies" and there i under no
> circumstances wa
Hi Stefan.
Am Sonntag, den 18.11.2018, 17:41 +0100 schrieb Stefan Claas:
> Hi all,
>
> while i do respect the privacy of people, i was wondering,
> since i see the public key server network as a public data
> base containing full names and who signed who's public
> key, if there is a tool availab
Hi Stefan,
the ex- and import of the keys at commandline in terminal works fine.
But I wanted to make screenshots of the process for a presentation i
would use for a training of "newbies" and there i under no circumstances
want to work in terminal or commandline interface.
And i could reproduce
Hi all,
while i do respect the privacy of people, i was wondering,
since i see the public key server network as a public data
base containing full names and who signed who's public
key, if there is a tool available (source code preferably
written in Golang) which allows a user to connect to
a key
On Sun, 18 Nov 2018 14:52:14 +0100, Juergen Bruckner wrote:
> Hello Groups,
>
> I do this as crossposting on gnupg and enigmail - lists.
>
> Raspian: November 2018 (Kernel 4.4)
> Thunderbird: 52.9.1 - 32bit
> Enigmail 2.0.8 (20180804-1515)
> all installed from the Raspbian-sources
>
> At the mom
Hello Groups,
I do this as crossposting on gnupg and enigmail - lists.
Raspian: November 2018 (Kernel 4.4)
Thunderbird: 52.9.1 - 32bit
Enigmail 2.0.8 (20180804-1515)
all installed from the Raspbian-sources
At the moment I try to etablish a "Backup-Mail-Client" on a RaspberryPi
with Thunderbird,
Hi all,
while i don't use public keys from email services which offer as a
service to create the key pair on their servers, i have a question,
for those who use ProtonMail from the very beginning and have
made a copy from that public key.
I ask because it puzzles me a bit when i discovered a whil
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