"Ed" == Edward R Figueroa <kb4vwa@juno.com> writes:
Ed> I'm a new Cyberpunk! I apologized if this is not the place to Ed> post this message request. It isn't. This is cypherpunks, not cyberpunks. Ed> I would like to know where to place my Public Key? Note, I only Ed> have E-mail access at this time, and not the Net access, but could Ed> have a friend place the key for me. http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/~bal/pks-toplev.html Since you're email only, I'll humor you, and put the entire text of the instructions to the email interface to the PGP keyserver at the bottom of my message. Ed> Last, I would like to know once and for all, is PGP compromised, Ed> is there a back door, and have we been fooled by NSA to believe Ed> it's secure? No. ------------------------- begin instructions ------------------------- Using the E-mail interface to the keyserver Using the E-mail interface to the keyserver ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ [ Norwegian: For aa faa dette dokumentet paa norsk, send "HELP NO" til pgp-public-keys@keys.no.pgp.net German: Fuer eine deutschsprachige Fassung dieses Textes senden Sie eine Mail mit dem Subject "HELP DE" an die folgende Adresse pgp-public-keys@keys.de.pgp.net ] PGP Public Email Keyservers --------------------------- There are PGP public email key servers which allow one to exchange public keys running using the Internet and UUCP mail systems. Those capable of accessing the WWW might prefer to use the WWW interface available via http://www.pgp.net/pgp/www-key.html and managers of sites which may want to make frequent lookups may care to copy the full keyring from the FTP server at ftp.pgp.net:pub/pgp/ This service exists only to help transfer keys between PGP users. It does NOT attempt to guarantee that a key is a valid key; use the signatures on a key for that kind of security. Each keyserver processes requests in the form of mail messages. The commands for the server are entered on the Subject: line. ---------------------------------------------- ======== ----- Note that they should NOT be included in the body of the message. --------------------- === --------------------------------------- To: pgp-public-keys@keys.pgp.net From: johndoe@some.site.edu Subject: help Sending your key to ONE server is enough. After it processes your key, it will forward your add request to other servers automagically. For example, to add your key to the keyserver, or to update your key if it is already there, send a message similar to the following to any server: To: pgp-public-keys@keys.pgp.net From: johndoe@some.site.edu Subject: add -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: 2.6 -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- COMPROMISED KEYS: Create a Key Revocation Certificate (read the PGP docs on how to do that) and mail your key to the server once again, with the ADD command. Valid commands are: Command Message body contains ---------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ADD Your PGP public key (key to add is body of msg) INDEX List all PGP keys the server knows about (-kv) VERBOSE INDEX List all PGP keys, verbose format (-kvv) GET Get the whole public key ring (split) GET userid Get just that one key MGET regexp Get all keys which match /regexp/ regexp must be at least two characters long LAST days Get the keys updated in the last `days' days ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Examples for the MGET command: MGET michael Gets all keys which have "michael" in them MGET iastate All keys which contain "iastate" MGET E8F605A5|5F3E38F5 Those two keyid's One word about regexps: These are not the same as the wildcards Unix shells and MSDOS uses. A * isn't ``match anything'' it means ``match zero or more of the previous character'' like: a.* matches anything beginning with an a ab*c matches ac, abc, abbc, etc. Just try not to use ``MGET .*'' -- use ``GET'' instead. Note on the ``GET'' command: If at all possible, ftp the keyring from a server such as ftp.pgp.net:pub/pgp/keys rather than using the ``GET'' command to return the whole ring. Currently, this ring comes out to be over 50 files of 52k each. This is a lot of files, and a lot of bother to get in the right order to run through PGP. Users should normally use the email address `pgp-public-keys@keys.pgp.net' or your national servers using one of: pgp-public-keys@keys.de.pgp.net pgp-public-keys@keys.nl.pgp.net pgp-public-keys@keys.no.pgp.net pgp-public-keys@keys.uk.pgp.net pgp-public-keys@keys.us.pgp.net for the email interface, and `ftp.pgp.net:pub/pgp/' for FTP access. Users are recommended to use the "*.pgp.net" addresses above as these are stable and reliable. -------------------------------- end --------------------------------- -- Matt Curtin cmcurtin@research.megasoft.com Megasoft, Inc Chief Scientist http://www.research.megasoft.com/people/cmcurtin/ I speak only for myself. Hacker Security Firewall Crypto PGP Privacy Unix Perl Java Internet Intranet