-- On 2 Oct 2002 at 16:19, Adam Shostack wrote:
Whats wrong with PGP sigs is that going on 9 full years after I generated my first pgp key, my mom still can't use the stuff.
The fact that your mum cannot use the stuff is only half the problem. I am a computer expert, a key administrator, someone who has been paid to write cryptographic code, and half the time I cannot use pgp. Of course, I have had real occasion to use this stuff so rarely that I suspect your mother would never use it no matter how user friendly. The lack of demand may have something to do with Hettinga's rant, that all cryptography is financial cryptography. As I am fond of pointing out, envelopes were first invented to contain records of goods and payments. People use encryption when money is at stake. If people start routinely making binding deals on the internet, they will soon routinely use encryption. --digsig James A. Donald 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG Yek7NX953gkX+mwOcaRKW13pMWVzckXtQLHH7Oqt 45E6Pq+EKfccaEUOQLWtfPKtgE9yfk5u/o8MMv4HG