JYA and Cryptome Passphrase Are Secure
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 JYA and Cryptome passphrases are secure. Plaintext discovered not related to Cryptome, with alternative to decrypt: original not scrubbed. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP Desktop 9.6.3 (Build 3017) wsFVAwUBVfqf1UkY+k7YfUNsAQiovg/7BxJIAHhEUL65hjh4XsvwJlS91R1jE0zw LYBiut1uLPga1TZDH8L3NQP7Vq0y18yvsmch5n6Gy5AhQWbSZ7sJ2xP+ULc6uK+b MNpdaaCIgBVH4e83DVhyEh68r8qJ1fOhElW6WaLxXiPvDA/8WGKAhkpfR1/ghNpe SdbaY8PKIYzGYnXaESNhTKfsaiykO6FlaGMSYfyCe5Z4iEzB5HgCYLH1Nb+G91Q6 C2gcQSf6vBCzoPK99FxSAmqEahlECI1tNKJg5pH7uY3otzbuV7CcJ9Yn27MbrQvk dXJBIr1oMekz4d8Dp3b0hAvL394stKWsP5GfbZ4vvgltBKL0lVOwYMOFuHDXGTmb nANIUXvgbiIRUdX0u3uqk7I1NiChEGGwtA+7g4wTIqUy6SfviA0nTCu5Elka4T+j 32NLlxDpmLIM1KZ6t5YELz7CYVv2JYMNiOWkyAJOXbCglrJvpyvbyRLMuOEMgieD eICPHknwiHAdzI40eWVLpPaet0VKyqOvNb1cnjcA+NBUpH+idmcosNEBpvZVbZb0 99/4ii68qqz26N3xeIPxvmoSx9iXXRMUip4Iku4pQrbac64D/X3pck0ryd6yCaxU 8TldVI0oQVozp8H8VrP0ZICG+Y1vg//GYNorSJkoL3P3svwDfm/3WdcblWUrxhFw XVyThcbWdxQ= =XoD0 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 07:12:29AM -0400, John Young wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256
JYA and Cryptome passphrases are secure. Plaintext discovered not related to Cryptome, with alternative to decrypt: original not scrubbed.
Would you bet your life on this? Secure to ``thermal'' cryptoanalysis? This header, unless spoofed on purpose: X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 7.1.0.9 suggests at least m$ and the nsa can easily obtain your passphrases...
It's PGP, not GP nor P. At 07:20 AM 9/17/2015, Georgi Guninski wrote:
On Thu, Sep 17, 2015 at 07:12:29AM -0400, John Young wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256
JYA and Cryptome passphrases are secure. Plaintext discovered not related to Cryptome, with alternative to decrypt: original not scrubbed.
Would you bet your life on this?
Secure to ``thermal'' cryptoanalysis?
This header, unless spoofed on purpose:
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 7.1.0.9
suggests at least m$ and the nsa can easily obtain your passphrases...
On Sep 17, 2015, at 8:24 AM, John Young <jya@pipeline.com> wrote:
It's PGP, not GP nor P.
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Version 7.1.0.9
The cobbler’s children have no shoes. :-) Cheers, RAH Who’s blown up so many keys in so many dead hard drives, it’s not worth it anymore. Key management is hard.
participants (3)
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Georgi Guninski
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John Young
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Robert Hettinga