one else done something like this? Any references or suggestions
are appreciated.
Thanks,
Steve
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use on newer GnuPG to request larger keys to be generated on our
Yubikeys. Can someone point me in the right direction for this information?
Thanks,
--
R. Steve McKown
Titanium Mirror, Inc.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
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On 04/09/2017 08:49 PM, NIIBE Yutaka wrote:
> Steve McKown <rsmck...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Can someone explain why ssh after sign asks for the passphrase again,
>> and what I might be able to do to avoid this condition? It's not a big
>> deal, but I do wonder if it
e:NNN]" that
is not present for auth or crypt operations.
Can someone explain why ssh after sign asks for the passphrase again,
and what I might be able to do to avoid this condition? It's not a big
deal, but I do wonder if it suggests a misconfiguration on my part.
Tha
Jim,
I don't use modern but I do have a script for classic that works in unattended
mode on a Linux box. The caller knows the input file name and the script knows
my passphrase -- default gpg_pass2. Hope this helps with gpg2! --Steve
$ cat gpg_encrypt
#!/bin/ksh
usage="gpg_encrypt [ -a
Go to any public key server and get that key ID.
However, before doing that, I'd first verify the checksum without using GnuPG.
That process should also have been described on the download page.
-Original Message-
From: Gnupg-users
they did wrong on their end.
On a couple of occasions I've had vendors send me their private key along with
the public key. [Holding head in hands!] You may need to hold their hands to
get this working right for you.
--Steve
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CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail message, including
st legitimising it ...
Steve
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Euro Tech News Blog http://eurotechnews.blogspot.com
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orm their way in and get
> themselves trusted and included in the encryption list.
Unfortunately it doesn't matter if it's needed, it's becoming law (well
it's already law under RIP, but DRIP 'expires' this year, so now
enshrined under IP Act).
It's a blanked law to ensure what's being done alre
you refuse, you go to jail until
you do ...
There are other major issues like equipment interference and bulk
interception to name a few.
Steve
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social id stevekennedyuk
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Any "secure" storage for the passphrase will itself need a mechanism to
"unlock". This only digs the hole one more level down. Only you can decide
when to stop digging. But remember, whatever the automated script can do, a
human following the script can also do. [Note to self, use "hacker"
Did you say this was on a VM? We've had corrupted files with 'cp' from one
file system to another on a VM box if it decided to do a vmotion while the copy
was in progress.
Just remember -- "To err is human, but to really foul things up you need a
computer."(Paul Ehrlich)
-Original
Perhaps an ASCII download instead of binary? That would make the download file
larger!
-Original Message-
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-bounces+sbutler=fchn@gnupg.org] On
Behalf Of Aaron Tovo
Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2016 8:45 PM
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: Re:
Either set --homedir on the command line or in the options file.
-Original Message-
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-boun...@gnupg.org] On Behalf Of Jarle
Hammen Knudsen
Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2015 8:19 AM
To: Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: Get gpg to use keyring files in the
There is under 1.4. Don't know if it is in v2. I'm not at my desk to pop the
script open. But you could pipe the passphrase via stain and tell gpg to
grab it from there. Be careful as that still leaves it in the clear to those
reading your script. Potential local users could also see it
bottom left,
and has fingerprint 85E3 8F69 046B 44C1 EC9F B07B 76D7 8F05 00D0 26C4.
The source in question is on GitHub at https://github.com/GPGTools/localizeXIB
<https://github.com/GPGTools/localizeXIB> and the binary is no longer required
to compile pinentry-mac.
Kind regards,
steve
-Original Message-
From: Werner Koch [mailto:w...@gnupg.org]
Sent: Friday, July 24, 2015 4:24 AM
On Thu, 23 Jul 2015 19:11, sbut...@fchn.com said:
This is a snippet of the script I use to decrypt any file coming to me that
has my private key (or my companies private key)
$DFLT
This is a snippet of the script I use to decrypt any file coming to me that has
my private key (or my companies private key)
$DFLT gpg_pass2 \
| gpg --homedir $homedir --quiet --passphrase-fd 0 --no-tty --skip-verify \
--no-permission-warning --no-mdc-warning --batch \
thumb drive at home to see if they are buried someplace there.
--Steve
-Original Message-
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-boun...@gnupg.org] On Behalf Of A.T.
Leibson
Sent: Tuesday, June 16, 2015 6:50 AM
To: Gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Subject: Teaching GnuPG to noobs
Hi everyone,
What
MFPA:
On Monday 1 June 2015 at 5:37:33 PM, in
mid:20150601183733.3fc5b...@frustcomp.home.hnjs.ch,
gnupg-us...@henk.geekmail.org wrote:
A comment worth reading in case one does not see it oneself IMHO:
https://blogs.fsfe.org/gerloff/2015/06/01/facebook-offers-to-send-you
or GCHQ taking in
every single email that crossed their borders.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
pgpb9gmjiGWFb.pgp
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
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anyway you might as well have some confidence that you're
using the right key.
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Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
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securely? If the keyserver has certified the key with a
challenge response protocol you've got your answer.
Ideally you'd have an email address and a fingerprint, but often you
don't.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
a lot harder.
I assume this has already been discussed on some key server devel list? But
have not followed that discussion, so I’m not aware.
All the best,
steve
Am 22.07.2014 um 16:27 schrieb Werner Koch w...@gnupg.org:
On Tue, 22 Jul 2014 09:40, enigm...@josuttis.de said:
More and more
://link-comm.com/temp/big.txt
Thanks, Peter and Johan, for your help.
Steve
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Link Communications, Inc.
1035 Cerise Rd
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(406) 245-5002 ext 102
(406) 245-4889 (fax)
WWW: http://www.link-comm.com
MailTo:steve.stro...@link-comm.com
IDLINKTDS idlink...@vtrunk.net
I would be glad to send the keyring file if that would make troubleshooting
easier (the keys are not valuable). Thanks for any pointers.
Steve
--
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Link Communications, Inc.
1035 Cerise Rd
Billings, MT 59101-7378
(406) 245-5002 ext
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 01:15:07 +
MFPA 2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net wrote:
On Thursday 30 January 2014 at 10:43:39 PM, in
mid:20140130224339.5fcb0d27@steves-laptop, Steve Jones wrote:
Well therein lies my problem with the PGP
On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 15:02:14 +0100
NdK ndk.cla...@gmail.com wrote:
Il 31/01/2014 10:24, Steve Jones ha scritto:
Well the conventions of use, for example the key signing party
protocol, requires photographic id. If I publicly sign a key it has
to be in line with how I expect others
contact.
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Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
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On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 21:09:45 +
MFPA 2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net wrote:
On Thursday 30 January 2014 at 12:58:44 AM, in
mid:20140130005844.1f0f5b54@steves-laptop, Steve Jones wrote:
The advantage you have here though is the web of trust.
1 level 1 signature would probably
On Wed, 29 Jan 2014 11:14:11 +
nb.linux nb.li...@xandea.de wrote:
Gregor Zattler:
Hi Steve, gnupg users,
* Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org [24. Jan. 2014]:
That's an interesting idea. But there is still the possibility
of a man in the middle attac... The web of trust
is useless if they're secretly working against you.
- --
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux)
iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJS6aPEAAoJEEgVHtdrBwIA3cMIAOR684K06OPgZP30NeK7qu3u
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On Thu, 30 Jan 2014 00:22:08 +
MFPA 2014-667rhzu3dc-lists-gro...@riseup.net wrote:
On Tuesday 28 January 2014 at 11:37:25 PM, in
mid:20140128233725.6b12b3d0@steves-laptop, Steve Jones wrote:
A more sophisticated approach
would
On Tue, 28 Jan 2014 20:13:30 +0100
Leo Gaspard ekl...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, Jan 24, 2014 at 11:08:16PM +, Steve Jones wrote:
[...]
Finally there's the possibility of explicit verification, if someone
sends me a challenge and I publish that challenge's signature on my
blog
is one half a monitor in
'monitor' height
You can use the pgpdump tool to see all the data in a public key file. A given
key might contain lots of extra data beside the actual key, like signatures and
photos.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272
... are known is more important
than some sort of confirmation of a person's name, which is not even a
unique identifier. If, for example, you'd signed your commits to
monkeysphere I'd be able to verify your claim that you are a
contributor to it (not that I doubt, or have any reason to doubt that).
--
Steve
client that
automatically signs keys at level 1 (persona) of anyone who replies
with a signed email that quotes a significant portion of the text I
sent, as this effectively counts as a challenge response protocol in my
book.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA
it would be useful to
be able to verify this. I'm curious what other people on this list think of
this.
[1] http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4880#section-5.11
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
signature.asc
Description: PGP
to not use
SHA1 digests which it appears to be using, as well as listing SHA1 as my second
favourite algorithm.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Key fingerprint: 3550 BFC8 D7BA 4286 0FBC 4272 2AC8 A680 7167 C896
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
not heard of any issues with that setup, but your mileage may vary.
Thanks, that was quite helpful. I've found I can just delete the self
signatures on my UID and replace them with better ones but I can't see a way to
change the subkey binding signature.
--
Steve Jones st...@secretvolcanobase.org
Hi team,
I downloaded gnupg-2.0.19 and got several errors reported by ./configure. The
error message is very clear said i missed some library and corresponding FTP
link was provided. But i was prompt for username/password when try to access.
Below is the link example.
*** It is now required to
still breaks PGP/MIME?
All the best and kind regards,
steve
Am 29.06.2012 um 17:48 schrieb Robert J. Hansen:
On 06/29/2012 08:06 AM, Brad Rogers wrote:
If you ask on Enigmail mailing list, they will tell you that that
issue is with Mailman (or other mailing list software) which messes up
Oh dear. I found it. The bug has been reported 2003:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/mailman/+bug/265961
I wish I had better coding skills, but I don't. Sorry I can't code the fix...
signature.asc
Description: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail
___
Hey Robin,
I'll send you a testmail in a minute. I'm the guy from the GPGTools support
discussion we had today.
Talk to you off-list.
If any of the GnuPG wizards like to chime in on the technical side on the bug
tracker we're happy about any input.
Cheers,
steve
Am 22.05.2012 um 20:06
more work.
Currently we encourage the user to send a test mail and do all this manually.
All the best,
steve
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Description: Message signed with OpenPGP using GPGMail
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of
wiki / faq (maybe editable by the users) would imo bring benefit to users,
trying to understand backgrounds.
@David let us know once you get the basic setup done. Would GitHub maybe be
sufficient as a wiki? I am sure there are other nice solutions around, too.
Cheers,
steve
I cannot verify
the
drama. Let's try to be constructive and solve problems. Not cause some where
there aren't any.
And as always: feel free to write a patch. :)
3
steve
Signierter PGP Teil
Why to move it to Enigmail list? That email which you quoted doesn't
have mention Enigmail. As far as I know, GPGTools
somewhere…
All the best, steve
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that happen.
All the best,
steve
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?
all the best, steve
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,
steve
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is a question I can't answer.
Thanks
Sethukumar
Steve
---
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Link Communications, Inc.
1035 Cerise Rd
Billings, MT 59101-7378
(406) 245-5002 ext 102
(406) 245-4889 (fax)
WWW: http://www.link-comm.com
MailTo:steve.stro...@link-comm.com
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User (do not use) test_u...@gmail.com
What am I missing? I presume that there security implications of using
--allow-non-selfsigned-uid? Thanks for any suggestions.
Steve
---
Steve Strobel
Link Communications, Inc.
1035 Cerise Rd
Billings, MT 59101-7378
(406) 245-5002 ext 102
(406) 245-4889
://www.gpgtools.org/macgpg2.html
All the best,
steve
Am 15.02.2011 um 10:19 schrieb Werner Koch:
Hi,
thanks for explaining the project. I looked at your packes and found no
reason not to include it. In particular the quick links to the license
files were helpful for checking
be
prosecuted for refusing to hand over keys to encrypted systems.
It's unlikely a judge would find you guilty (or a jury) if you didn't
have the keys).
All in the name of terrorism though ...
Steve
--
NetTek Ltd UK mob +44 7775 755503
UK +44 20 7993 2612 / US +1 310 857 7715 / Fax +44 20
.)
Steve
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v2.0.10 (Darwin)
iEYEARECAAYFAknOR4kACgkQX7YJI4BuyDSrnQCfQ3HjyT2VSwqaw6Hx0QrPyrUu
6Z0AoKi2PIMJG1h/kpyKPeP9lJ9y3gM/
=9O3c
-END PGP SIGNATURE-
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for su. su - is supposed to
simulate a full login of the target account; it discards most
environment. By contrast, su (without the minus) doesn't discard
the environment.
The su(1) manpage on your system should give more specific about how
su - is handled.
Steve
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE
process.
As you note, Runtime.exec does not start a shell; it's much closer in
spirit to C's execv than to perl's piped open.
Steve
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treated
as three separate arguments.
Try providing the command as a String[], e.g.
String cmd[] = {
gpg,
--homedir,
System.getProperty(user.dir) + File.separator + .gnupg,
-s,
-u,
The Certificate Key
};
runtime.exec(cmd);
Steve
/environment.plist doesn't seem like a
good option for this). gpg-agent's man page gives a pretty good
recipie for setting the environment variables.
HTH
Steve
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v2.0.8 (Darwin)
iEYEARECAAYFAkfjBCsACgkQX7YJI4BuyDSoOACeMI+UG+dw+7jl1mwW3CunTY2n
stdout and stderr from cmd.exe, as well as
gpg.ext.
You might also try checking for differences between the set of
environment variables your batch file sees under Windows task manager
vs the set of environment variables your batch file sees from an
interactive login session.
Steve
-BEGIN PGP
--homedir o:\utilities \
--passphrase-fd 0 \
--load-extension o:\utilities\idea.dll \
-o o:\apricing\morgan_cds_20080229.txt \
-d o:\apricing\24476.txt.pgp o:\apricing\pass.txt
Also, be careful of extra whitespace in pass.txt.
Steve
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version
winds up getting -END PGP MESSAGE- as the passphrase.
(In my case, the workaround is don't select the END line. I'm not
sure about yours, though).
Steve
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v2.0.8 (Darwin)
iEYEARECAAYFAke7jj4ACgkQX7YJI4BuyDStLQCfVRnC2wUQL42VpH3TNA0WZ2FF
that contained your encrypted file, boot up, read
what you needed, then halt.
Steve
From: Philipp Gühring [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 6 Feb 2008 02:22:09 +0100
Subject: Re: Safe decryption with GnuPG?
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Cc: Krzysztof Żelechowski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi
that contained your encrypted file, boot up, read
what you needed, then halt.
Steve
From: Philipp Gühring [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 6 Feb 2008 02:22:09 +0100
Subject: Re: Safe decryption with GnuPG?
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: gnupg-users@gnupg.org
Cc: Krzysztof Żelechowski [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi
that they
send me, right?)
The symptom seem to match a little with what was described in:
http://marc.info/?l=gnupg-usersm=104982312123419w=2
But, as that was supposed to be resolved 4 years ago, I hope that this
is just some user error on my part.
Cheers,
Steve
I have an application where I have data in memory that needs to be
encrypted without ever being written to disc, even temporarily.
Using PGP I can run pgp -feat and then pipe the data to the pgp
process. That works very well.
I have to do the same thing for GPG, but I can't figure out how to
?
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S.M. Fabac Associates
816/765-1670
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it
to run the gpg commands above.
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S.M. Fabac Associates
816/765-1670
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