://heise.de/-4051354
(in German language, I don't think it's worth a translation :-/ )
Regards
Matthias
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
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On 16 Jan 2018 at 20:08, Kristian Fiskerstrand wrote:
> On 01/16/2018 07:50 PM, Andrew Gallagher wrote:
> > Agreed. I was thinking more along the lines of having some method of
> > causing signature vandalism to expire.
>
> They don't really constitute an issue either for security or privacy,
>
On 15 Jan 2018 at 21:23, Stefan Claas wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Jan 2018 15:00:34 -0500, Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> > > How long do we have now those old fashioned key servers
> >
> > SKS came out in 2003. It largely replaced PKS, which was widely
> > considered old and broken. SKS was Yaron
On 15 Jan 2018 at 18:53, Andrew Gallagher wrote:
>
> > On 15 Jan 2018, at 16:39, Stefan Claas
> > wrote:
> >
> > Maybe we need (a court) case were a PGP user requests the removal of
> > his / her keys until the operators and code maintainers wake up?
>
> You also need
On 11 Jul 2017 at 9:44, Binarus wrote:
> On 10.07.2017 17:42, Guan Xin wrote:
> > This is probably a general question --
> >
> > I have never seen a German bank that allows changing the PIN of a card.
>
> I am not sure if this is an intentional limitation of the cards (to
> prevent users from
On 8 Apr 2017 at 10:30, Roy A. Gilmore wrote:
> I've been watching this thread for a while, and felt the need to chime
> in. Are smartcards (or USB tokens) a PITA? Sometimes. BUT, leaving
> your private key on your laptop, tablet, or phone is about as secure
> as leaving a spare key to your house
Hello list,
I just want to tell as it is now: It seems to happen something
strange with network access within this PC. If it happens again, the
mail client Pegasus cannot connect at all to localhost (neither to
127.0.0.1) where GPGRelay (the GnuPG "Proxy") would listen - If
GPGRelay just
On 11 Dec 2016 at 20:43, Stephan Beck wrote:
> I'm truly interested in receiving such log files to have a look
> into it myself, but the list may be interested as well. If there was
> really something "special" about (precisely) my signatures, as you
> say, I'd be eager to know, check and take
On 11 Dec 2016 at 13:40, NdK wrote:
[...]
> I think it could even be realated to some HW issue. Are fans clean?
Yes, and all temperatures are under monitoring
> Are capacitors OK? Electrolytic ones, the tall cylinders, often
> tend to "explode": they usually have an 'X' on the top and that
>
On 11 Dec 2016 at 9:40, Stephan Beck wrote:
>
> Stephan Beck:
> > Hi Matthias,
> >
> > Matthias Mansfeld:
> >> Hello, maybe someone has similar effects or can give me a hint
> >> where to look. If not, it's OK...
> >>
> >> Wind
On 9 Dec 2016 at 14:01, Stephan Beck wrote:
> Hi Matthias,
[..]
> > Windows 7 pro(64), GPGRelay 9.962 (a POP3/SMTP "proxy" or better
> > local relay for GnuPG), GnuPG 1.4.18, Pegasus Mail 4.72de
> >
> > Based on something strange on my computer (blocked memory etc. up
> to
> > explorer.exe
Hello, maybe someone has similar effects or can give me a hint where
to look. If not, it's OK...
Windows 7 pro(64), GPGRelay 9.962 (a POP3/SMTP "proxy" or better
local relay for GnuPG), GnuPG 1.4.18, Pegasus Mail 4.72de
Based on something strange on my computer (blocked memory etc. up to
On 12 Feb 2016 at 9:35, gnupgpacker wrote:
> Wowh, what a comprehensive answer... :)
> THANKS!
>
> > Furthermore, pipes do generally work on Windows.
> > Wouldn't this work?
> > gpg2\gpg2.exe --export | gpg14\gpg.exe --import
>
> Similar pipes are working in Windows.
>
> > gpg2\gpg2.exe
On 5 Feb 2016 at 0:36, Sam Pablo Kuper wrote:
>
> At the bottom right-hand corner of many (all?) pages on the GnuPG
> website, the following image is present:
> https://www.gnupg.org/share/traueranzeige-g10_v2015.png
>
> It has an alt attribute that gives the text content of the image, and
>
On 3 Mar 2015 at 21:24, Ingo Klöcker wrote:
[..]
After the recent terrorist attacks in Paris and Brussels some German
politicians are again arguing that we need Vorratsdatenspeicherung
(data retention, i.e. storage of all communication meta data for 6
months) in Germany to prevent such
used against unlawful combatants..
Today in paranoid mode
Matthias
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
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systems would not make OpenPGP more
user friendly.
What about crowdfunding such a development?
Matthias
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Printed Circuit Board Design and
Assembly
Neithardtstr. 3, D-85540 Haar, GERMANY
Phone: +49-89-4620 0937, Fax: +49-89-4620 0938
Internet: http://www.mansfeld
or encrypted mail in the clipboard and Ctrl-V it in any
GnuPG Interface. Doesn't work with a PGP/MIME mail.
Regards
Matthias
--
Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG http
handle this, with inline
signature.
Regards
Matthias
--
Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de/gnupgkey/mansfeld.asc
in the very beginning of this discussion!) then it is
totally enough just to encrypt the mails end to end on their way.
Regards
Matthias
--
Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG
, nonsense and
spam
Technical reasons, NOT to encrypt on a list server are another disussion.
Best regards
Matthias
--
Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG http
On 15 Apr 2009 at 12:25, Faramir wrote:
Chris Hills escribió:
Hypothetically, if a key is signed using another key which contains
a jpg image of something illegal in the keyserver's location, what
then? It would seem to me that the only option would be to remove
the keyserver from the
On 6 Feb 2009 at 11:10, gerry_lowry (alliston ontario canada) wrote:
even if the rumours are true that the government may have such an
ability, we'd never know.
Then they would need brute force against key AND password or they
know about weaknesses in algorithms which nobody else knows.
At
the original.
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de/gnupgkey/mansfeld.asc
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Mansfeld
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
Internet: http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de
GPG http://www.mansfeld-elektronik.de/gnupgkey/mansfeld.asc
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additionally at another
location.
Even if somebody else gets your private keys, they aren't worth
anything for him as long as he hasn't your passphrases.
Best wishes
Matthias
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Matthias Mansfeld Elektronik * Leiterplattenlayout
Neithardtstr. 3, 85540 Haar; Tel.: 089/4620 093-7, Fax: -8
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