On 24 Mar 2014, at 6:38 , Jonathan Wilkes wrote:
> If I were so inclined couldn't I periodically query every publicly
> accessable PGP keyserver (maybe do it in a distributed manner) and upload a
> new key with the same name/email address as what was added since the last
> time I checked?
Jonathan Wilkes writes:
> Furthermore, couldn't I periodically query every publicly accessible
> PGP keyserver (maybe do it in a distributed manner) to see who
> signed what, and then mirror that web of trust with the keys I
> control?
>
> Furthermore, couldn't I also upload keys with same name/e
> Hi list,
Hi,
Please also search the list's archives -- and archives of tor-talk at
torproject.org -- as in the last year or so there've been about 4
threads on WoT privacy/security issues that you are asking.
Also check out:
https://we.riseup.net/riseuplabs+paow/openpgp-best-practices
If
* Jonathan Wilkes:
> If I were so inclined couldn't I periodically query every
> publicly accessable PGP keyserver (maybe do it in a distributed
> manner) and upload a new key with the same name/email address as what
> was added since the last time I checked?
Yes, key servers generally do no
On Sun, 2014-03-23 at 16:08 -0400, Jonathan Wilkes wrote:
> Hi list,
> If I were so inclined couldn't I periodically query every publicly
> accessable PGP keyserver (maybe do it in a distributed manner) and
> upload a new key with the same name/email address as what was added
> since the
Hi list,
If I were so inclined couldn't I periodically query every publicly
accessable PGP keyserver (maybe do it in a distributed manner) and
upload a new key with the same name/email address as what was added
since the last time I checked?
Furthermore, couldn't I periodically query eve