-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 > I think I answered this above, but I'm not sure if you mean what I'm > interpreting "certifying" to mean. Please correct me if you mean > something else.
I have set up a keyserver (on a trial basis) and asked my colleagues to add their keys to it. When I try to send them a mail and import their keys, I am told that the "Key is not certified by the keyserver. Am I sure I want that key?" I assume, that a key signed by the private key of the server is one which is certified?? Or am I missing something totally obvious? Also, if I am using gpg and know just my friends email ID, how can I import his key. The command gpg --keyserver "IP KS" --recv keys "username" doesnt work. It needs the ID as the argument, not the username. Reading the man page didnt seem to help. :( Regards, Dhar - -- Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface. pub 1024D/7AB2D05A 2002-02-24 Sumit Dhar (Sumit Dhar, SLMSoft.com) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Key fingerprint = 4A18 D20D 3D15 6C5B CD2F 8E45 B903 0C29 7AB2 D05A -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE8hkXjuQMMKXqy0FoRAiBoAJ4ujfI2x+SKMAiHtn8RT+637i3XiwCgyL7Y m3HfW9ePOypGI9TL42uDz6M= =dEGB -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----