using openkeychain with a yubikey nfc is totally solid, and convenient.
I've been using them for years. they also plug into the bottom of the
phones which some people prefer.
On Tue, Dec 11, 2018, 10:14 AM Damien Goutte-Gattat via Gnupg-users <
gnupg-users@gnupg.org wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 11, 2018
On 11.12.2018 19:11, Damien Goutte-Gattat via Gnupg-users wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 12:35:57PM +0100, Alessandro Vesely wrote:
>> Is it possible to get OpenPGP functionality on one of those
>> contactless cards?
>
> I know of at least one NFC-enabled OpenPGP card, the "Fidesmo
> Card" [1].
Thank you for your answers.
On Tue 11/Dec/2018 19:27:28 +0100 Arthur Ulfeldt wrote:
> using openkeychain with a yubikey nfc is totally solid, and convenient. I've
> been using them for years. they also plug into the bottom of the phones which
> some people prefer.
I dislike yubikey because of
On Tue, 11 Dec 2018 09:28, fka...@posteo.net said:
> from September 2017 for configure.ac that allows to circumvent a
> huge performance regression with gnupg v2 keys in some contexts.
>
> This commit is not in stable though.
Right. The bug was closed so we forgot about it. Thanks for the
Hi all,
I'm trying to spread use of OpenPGP among users of my tiny mail server. I'm
recommending 4096-bit keys on smart card, which seems to be the safest bet for
a long lasting setup. I print email addresses on the cards, and publish their
keys on the web server's wkd.
My problem is with
Hi,
in the master branch there is the commit
https://dev.gnupg.org/rG926d07c5fa05de05caef3a72b6fe156606ac0549
from September 2017 for configure.ac that allows to circumvent a
huge performance regression with gnupg v2 keys in some contexts.
This commit is not in stable though.
I am not
On Fri, 7 Dec 2018 14:51, per.tore.johan...@ecp.no said:
> Installed GnuPG from : gnupg-i5pase-1.4.10b.tar.Z on Power for I. OS
> release V7R3
That looks like a modified version of an old GnuPG 1 version from 2009.
Please do not use such an old version. The current 1.4 version 1.4.23
From