Re: private-keys-v1.d and preserve-permissions

2020-09-09 Thread Werner Koch via Gnupg-users
On Wed, 9 Sep 2020 19:37, Werner Koch said: > I looked at the history and the reason for the described behaviour is > documented at https://dev.gnupg.org/T2312. I re-opened that bug. Fixed in master and 2.2 see the ticket above for the patch. Salam-Shalom, Werner -- Die Gedanken sind

Re: private-keys-v1.d and preserve-permissions

2020-09-09 Thread Werner Koch via Gnupg-users
Hi, I looked at the history and the reason for the described behaviour is documented at https://dev.gnupg.org/T2312. I re-opened that bug. Shalom-Salam, Werner -- Die Gedanken sind frei. Ausnahmen regelt ein Bundesgesetz. signature.asc Description: PGP signature

Re: private-keys-v1.d and preserve-permissions

2020-09-09 Thread Werner Koch via Gnupg-users
On Wed, 9 Sep 2020 15:22, Martin Pätzold said: > And if the setting is not what I need, how can I prevent the > permissions for "private-keys-v1.d" from changing? The --preserve-permissions is a gpg option and not one of gpg-agent. In fact gpg does not known anything about private-keys-v1.d.

private-keys-v1.d and preserve-permissions

2020-09-09 Thread Martin Pätzold
Hello, I am working with Debian Stretch (9.13) and GPG 2.1.18. The "private-keys-v1.d" directory has per default the permissions 700 (drwx--), but I need them to be 770 (drwxrwx---). I can change the permissions ($ chmod 770 private-keys-v1.d) but after some time they are be back to 700.

Re: On Becky! Internet Mail's GnuPG Plugin

2020-09-09 Thread Jerry
On Tue, 08 Sep 2020 16:14:13 +, Ryan McGinnis via Gnupg-users stated: >A. Yes, you can still anonymously register for almost anything. It's >not straightforward and requires a bit of forethought and jumping >through hoops. No, it probably won't defeat the NSA, but if they're >your adversary

RE: On Becky! Internet Mail's GnuPG Plugin

2020-09-09 Thread Dieter Frye
> Unless you live in North Korea or something there are always ways around > SIM registration laws, though they get expensive depending on where you > live. > This may have been true at some point in the past, but unfortunately I failed to secure this type of solution when I had the chance to.