On 1/2/2024 at 9:26 AM, "Ingo Klöcker" wrote:
>Posteo will release data to authorities if they are forced to do
>so by a
>judicial order. See their transparency reports for details:
>https://posteo.de/en/site/transparency_report
>
>I'm still using Posteo.
=
Another option is Hushmail.
On Sat, Dec 30, 2023 at 11:30 PM Felix E. Klee wrote:
> Example output with line numbers:
>
> 01 Reader ...: Yubico YubiKey CCID 00 00
> 02 Application ID ...: D276000124010304000618698015
> 03 Application type .: OpenPGP
> 04 Version ..: 3.4
> 05 Manufactur
Il 02 gennaio 2024 alle 09:40 john doe via Gnupg-users ha scritto:
> In other words, how do you use e-mails with a recipient that should be
> able to open and reply to e-mails as usual.
If email is not a strict requirement, two Matrix can be set up
to have an encrypted conversation, same with XMP
On Dienstag, 2. Januar 2024 12:16:15 CET LuKaRo wrote:
> > I do not want to use Gmail to send that kind of informations and I'm
> > comtemplating using posteo.de.
> >
> > Is this any better?
>
> I'd argue of course it's better. Google openly admits reading your
> e-mail, so other mail providers t
I do not want to use Gmail to send that kind of informations and I'm
comtemplating using posteo.de.
Is this any better?
I'd argue of course it's better. Google openly admits reading your
e-mail, so other mail providers that respect your privacy should be
preferred. I particularly like posteo.
El día lunes, enero 01, 2024 a las 09:10:01p. m. +0100, Ingo Klöcker escribió:
> On Montag, 1. Januar 2024 20:33:28 CET Matthias Apitz wrote:
> > It seems from the man page that only '#' is documented:
>
> Must be an older version. The manual page of GnuPG 2.4.3 reads:
You are correct:
$ gpg --
Hi,
I need to send personal infos to a recipient who has no idea what
encryption is nor is able to decrypt an encrypted e-mail.
I do not want to use Gmail to send that kind of informations and I'm
comtemplating using posteo.de.
Is this any better?
In other words, how do you use e-mails with