Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-06 Thread Vladimir Nikishkin via Gnupg-users
>This ruling is more similar to rules that you are not required to wear >a badge that you spent some time in jail or need to state this in your CV. It is a ruling that gives more power to the government, whatever the "declared goal" actually is. The actual usage of this rule is to hide blatant e

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-06 Thread Werner Koch via Gnupg-users
On Tue, 5 Jan 2021 17:07, Robert J. Hansen said: > I'm doing is sharing true things with my buddy?" Whereas in Europe, > right-to-be-forgotten laws, enforced by the government, are seen as > wins for privacy, in America they would be (a) blatantly unlawful and I don't think that the right not t

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-06 Thread Johan Wevers
On 05-01-2021 23:07, Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users wrote: As always, it probably depends on who you have the most to fear from: your government, corporations, or maybe someone else? > In Europe it's a lot different. There, the prevailing culture cares a > lot more about limiting the ability o

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-05 Thread ಚಿರಾಗ್ ನಟರಾಜ್ via Gnupg-users
12021/00/04 08:01.47 ನಲ್ಲಿ, markus.ro...@neverbox.com ಬರೆದರು: > > On 2021-01-05 Stefan Claas via Gnupg-users - gnupg-users@gnupg.org wrote: > > ... but why are then SKS key servers > > still in operation, which allows third parties to look up who signed > > who's key and with what trust level

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-05 Thread Stefan Claas via Gnupg-users
On Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 12:09 AM Stefan Claas wrote: > What you say would fit more for a cross-platform OpenSource app > like Bitmessage, compared to PGP's or GnuPG's privacy philosophy. Regarding Bitmessage and OpenPGP. There was an announcement made last year about an Bitmessage OpenPGP chan, w

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-05 Thread Stefan Claas via Gnupg-users
On Tue, Jan 5, 2021 at 9:05 PM wrote: > > On 2021-01-05 Stefan Claas via Gnupg-users - gnupg-users@gnupg.org wrote: > > ... but why are then SKS key servers > > still in operation, which allows third parties to look up who signed > > who's key and with what trust level and GnuPG's WoT support,

Re: On future of GnuPG

2021-01-05 Thread Robert J. Hansen via Gnupg-users
> The landscape has changed dramatically from the times when the > original PGP fundamentals were introduced. Today, for any secure > personal communication system to be of practical use, it must > be designed from the ground up observing the following simple > principle: *anonymity is the necessar

On future of GnuPG

2021-01-05 Thread markus . rosco
On 2021-01-05 Stefan Claas via Gnupg-users - gnupg-users@gnupg.org wrote: ... but why are then SKS key servers still in operation, which allows third parties to look up who signed who's key and with what trust level and GnuPG's WoT support, compared to sq and Hagrid? The landscape has chang