Integrated crypto sounds useful, but it's fragile and ultimately a lose
On Sunday, November 3, 2002, at 12:19 PM, Tim May wrote:
As with the situation a decade ago, there are:
* several OSes in use (2-3 in Wintel world, 2 in Mac world, plus outliers) * various release versions of each * about 5-8 major mail programs covering these platforms * about 3-5 major newsreader programs
And I forgot to mention Linux... Anyway, this is "tower of Babel" situation we have always faced with trying to tightly integrate crypto with apps and OSes.
Several times over the past decade I have heard people urge others to change their mailer to one that is supported.
This is even worse than "not one-click operation," as it asks users to abandon programs and OSes they like or need in order to obtain a marginal gain of sending a receiving encrypted messages with one click.
To expand on this point a bit, I suspect one of the main reasons people who once used PGP stop using it, either privately or at corporations (as we have heard folks here testify about), is because something changes and things "break." They upgrade their OS, they get a new release of a mailer, and things break. And they don't have the time, energy, or inclination to track down all of the little gotchas that may have cause things to break. I know this happened to me several times over the years with various versions of PGP, Eudora, and Mac OS 7, 8, and 9. And I expect that if and when I upgrade my OS, or Mail program, and PGP breaks, I'll be without PGP until it all becomes straightforward again. Expecting people to use mailer and OSes other than the ones they already use just so they can get a bunch of "Hey, isn't this PGP rilly cool?" unsolicited messages is silly. (Which is why, to harp on it, I would favor a very clean text-only approach. Then there would be a slight amount more work needed, but not the breakage we see.)
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Tim May