
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Newsgroups: alt.security.pgp,sci.crypt,mail.cypherpunks In article <oTTsgD7w165w@bwalk.dm.com>, Dr. Dimitri Vulis <dlv@bwalk.dm.com> wrote:
I'll illustrate the problem with several scenarios of forgeries.
The easy way around this if you think this might happen is just to put a line at the top of your signed message stating where the message is supposed to go. Then if people see it elsewhere, they can figure out that something is amiss. See above for an example. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQEVAwUBMON8jiJFQNhhNdm5AQHCFgf9GbaCMWRckNQA4y9Av8e0nigYP0GpGxEh 0A2w9dvSJBmuzaMJ8QxERieGVE61U3+VXOLgssdWXZsnqOPBNKk+2hYyx+vatFL9 XKETZV245acLo4VMNNxV4m/hGteuHUb4oQEKCWHwylyh/f9wfvx+ZTjvTyd8RiqQ nwcpRPhRA4FozOaVNbjZw/A4nmvxq5I3gg3yMet3vfMWKdhLIy4gsvuhRm/asTGo BUSw8PIJQbFbrXpoyWsP/sWGDa5tjN7Z05HnX9yU3OIa0uk6K6e2xKVJUo3G2Jso Kts/pw2hqDBJ0K8XFsnicmncnUDz+FGNKqyCGsSFY8TlaVowpNFZJw== =VpDg -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Chris Adams (cadams@HiWAAY.net) Finger for PGP public key "So, if anybody wants to have hardware sent to them: don't call me, but instead write your own unix operating system. It has worked every time for me." - Linus Torvalds, author of Linux (Unix-like) OS