On Mon, 1 Jul 2019 15:13, gnupg-users@gnupg.org said:
> distribution keys in Gentoo. However, the main problem with WKD right
> now is that AFAIK GnuPG doesn't support refreshing existing keys via WKD
Actually gpg updates expired keys via WKD. However, to not break things
and not to go out
I'm kind of a corner case, but I can't use wkd because I don't control
my top level domain for my email. I also can't use DANE for the same
reason. I can and do use DNS CERT records because it allows a
second-level domain. I suppose this has been discussed to death, but
wouldn't it make sense
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Oops, forgot to sign it.
I'm kind of a corner case, but I can't use wkd because I don't control
my top level domain for my email. I also can't use DANE for the same
reason. I can and do use DNS CERT records because it allows a
second-level
On Mon, Jul 01, 2019 at 03:13:29PM +0200, Michał Górny via Gnupg-users wrote:
The problem with autocrypt are the cases where its security measures
are
tested. There is not good way to interact with the users in those cases.
I know this is not parts of its design goals, but it works against a
On Mon, 2019-07-01 at 12:18 +0200, Bernhard Reiter wrote:
> Am Montag 01 Juli 2019 01:36:41 schrieb Robert J. Hansen:
> > Now we've got Autocrypt, WKD, and Hagrid: of these Autocrypt is probably the
> > most mature and the easiest for email users.
>
> The problem with autocrypt are the cases
Am Montag 01 Juli 2019 01:36:41 schrieb Robert J. Hansen:
> Now we've got Autocrypt, WKD, and Hagrid: of these Autocrypt is probably the
> most mature and the easiest for email users.
The problem with autocrypt are the cases where its security measures are
tested. There is not good way to