Am Dienstag, den 07.02.2017, 11:33 + schrieb Andrew Gallagher:
> On 06/02/17 09:37, Richard Ulrich wrote:
> >
> > So we sometimes resort to keybase.io. There the key is verified by
> > some social media. Sure, if the social media profile have existed
> > f
for the payments with his GPG key.
He didn't have any signatures on his key.
In this scenario I'm grateful for every piece of validation to give the
key more credibility.
Rgds
Richard
Am Donnerstag, den 02.02.2017, 13:42 + schrieb Andrew Gallagher:
> On 02/02/17 12:02, Richard Ulrich wrote:
> &g
Hi Bertram,
sorry for the late answer.
Blockchain was mentioned in some answers, but nothing in concrete.
Check this out:
https://github.com/opentimestamps
Rgds
Richard
Am Freitag, den 02.12.2016, 03:12 +0100 schrieb Bertram Scharpf:
> Hi,
>
> we all know that kidnappers do publish a picture
I didn't read this list for a while, so forgive me if this was
discussed before.
For many years I have used gpg and gpg-agent with ssh support with an
OpenPGP smartcard.
On every ubuntu upgrade I had to fiddle a little bit to have gpg-agent
act for ssh auth. No big deal usually.
But this time,
Hi Ranjini,
Does it have to be truecrypt?
LUKS works very well with OpenPGP SmartCards or JavaApplets implementing
it (e.g. YubiKey NEO).
Just follow the steps in this blog post:
https://blog.kumina.nl/2010/07/two-factor-luks-using-ubuntu
Rgds
Richard
Am Donnerstag, den 19.02.2015, 13:53 +0530
Hi Werner,
So, I replaced my content in .bashrc with yours, but the behavior is
still exactly the same.
* ssh smartcard auth works accross different terminals. (so the agent
must be functional)
* evolution signiging works only if started from the terminal, even if I
comment out the line : if [
:
All this worked with the previous content in .bashrc.
Rgds
Richard
Am Montag, den 15.09.2014, 21:17 +0200 schrieb Richard Ulrich:
Hi Werner,
So, I replaced my content in .bashrc with yours, but the behavior is
still exactly the same.
* ssh smartcard auth works accross different terminals
After gpg-agent stopped to work for ssh auth from OpenPGP smartcard
after some ubuntu upgrade a while back, I launch it and set the env
variables in ~/.bashrc.
Since then I have to launch evolution from the terminal to have gnupg
correctly work with it. But even if I launch firefox from the
I realize, this question is more related to evolution than gpg directly,
but people here might know better than in an evolution mailing list
(which I'm not subscribed anyway).
Suppose a company has a mail address that is distributed among a group
of employees. E.g. if I send a mail to
I have my private sub keys on a smart card, and up until recently
decrypting was always fine.
Then I found out that for signing other people's keys, I need to have
the primary private key available. So I put it on a second smart card as
described here:
As this is about a crypto project, wouldn't it be adequate to accept
payments in crypto currencies?
Rgds
Richard
On Don, 2013-12-19 at 11:08 +0100, Werner Koch wrote:
GnuPG encryption project launches crowdfunding campaign
Today GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) has launched its first crowdfunding
I set up ssh authentication a long time ago according to the second half
of this guide (with smartcard):
http://www.programmierecke.net/howto/gpg-ssh.html
It worked without an issue until I recently upgraded to Ubuntu 13.10.
After the upgrade I had to disable the gnome-keyring-ssh and
When I generated my new private key, I used one of my email addresses.
This email address is stored both on the crypto stick (smart card) and
in the secring.gpg or pubring.gpg, probably both.
Now I would like to use that key with another email address.
Is it possible to change the email address
fehlgeschlagen: Allgemeiner Fehler
gpg: signing failed: Allgemeiner Fehler
#gpg2 --card-status
Application ID ...: D276000124010205115F
Version ..: 2.0
Manufacturer .: ZeitControl
Serial number : 115F
Name of cardholder: Richard Ulrich
Language prefs ...: de
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